Friday, March 9, 2018

New Yorkers to Albany: Tax Stock Buyback Trades to Protect Healthcare, Housing and Education


Barbara Bowen, President of the Professional Staff Congress.

Jerry Brown inherited a $27 billion dollar deficit when he took office in 2012.  He leaves office with a $6.1 billion budget surplus.  How did he do it?  Simple.  He raised taxes.  As Cleve Jones puts it, “…a state that had been plagued by deficits now enjoys a surplus because we RAISED TAXES ON THE RICH. You now can enjoy the luxury of debating what we'd like to see funded. But the overarching lesson here is about taxation. Now, debate away…”  New Yorkers could learn a little bit from this Left Coast story.  This was on my mind as I joined colleagues from the Professional Staff Congress of the City University of New York, VOCAL, and other anti-poverty organizations who converged downtown calling for the city and state to Tax Wall Street.
As Albany legislators and Governor Andrew Cuomo work to finalize a state budget by the end of the month, typical New York taxpayers demonstrated today at the New York Stock Exchange, urging them to implement a Stock Buy Back Transfer Tax. A .5% transfer tax on stock buyback trades could raise $2 billion a year in New York for affordable housing, healthcare and quality public education from kindergarten through CUNY.
“New York State should seek to impose a Stock Buyback Transfer tax when large profitable corporations are using their windfall from the federal tax cuts to buy back stocks rather than create jobs and increase worker pay,” said Jonas Shaende, PhD, senior budget and policy analyst with the Fiscal Policy Institute.  “This proposal builds upon the NYS Stock Transfer Tax, where we currently collect $13.8 billion a year in a minuscule sales tax on stock transactions and then astonishingly rebate 100 percent right back to the brokers that pay it. Reinstating this tax on buybacks would allow Governor Cuomo and the State Legislature to tax some of the windfall profits companies are making off the tax bill and protect New Yorkers from devastating federal cuts to health care and education.”
Pepsi Co, which has announced $15 billion in stock buybacks in 2018, is planning 200 layoffs in Westchester county. Wells Fargo, which has a long list of corporate misdeeds, has announced $22.6 billion in stock buybacks.  Community groups, unions and lawmakers are calling for them to pay their share of taxes in New York. Click here for a list of more than 40 corporations who have announced a total of $209 billion in stock buybacks in 2018.
Assemblymember Yuh-Line Niou (D-WFP), whose lower-Manhattan district includes the Financial District, spoke in support of the Stock Buy Back Transfer Tax.
"The concept behind the Stock Buyback Transfer Tax is simple—right now, big money interests are trying to buy back their own stock because of the huge amount they are now getting back from not having to pay federal taxes, so we want to enact a tax on these buybacks to ensure that big corporations are paying their fair share. We can't just stand by and allow those at the top to keep pocketing dollars that should go toward healthcare, affordable housing and livable wages for all New Yorkers,” said Assemblymember Niou. “We pay taxes on anything we buy. Why shouldn't big corporations have to pay taxes when they are buying something? This is a much, much smaller tax than the one everyday people have to pay when we go to the store to get a toothbrush or a pair of shoes, and it can go a long way toward helping working- and middle-class residents in our state."
The current budget being debated in Albany fails to adequately invest in critical public institutions and services. New York is dealing with the worst homeless crisis in our state’s history. Between 2011-2015 statewide homelessness increased by 41%. Over 89,000 people are living in shelters throughout the state.  Without aggressive state action, people will be left to languish in the shelter system.
The City University of New York, which has historically helped launch low-income New Yorkers into the middle class, has seen per-student funding at its senior colleges decline by 18% since 2008, adjusted for inflation.
 “Governor Cuomo says he is looking for ways to mitigate the worst impacts of the Trump tax bill,” said Charles Kahn, Organizing Director of the Strong Economy For All Coalition. “Getting this common-sense proposal passed is one way to do that.”
The push for a Stock Buyback Transfer Tax is part of month-long campaign to ensure that New York’s budget is not balanced on the backs of working people.  In the coming weeks, coalition groups will be meeting with lawmakers, demonstrating outside key legislators' district offices, and staging creative events. The Patriotic Millionaires & Responsible Wealth will bring one percenters who want to pay their fair share to Albany. NYS Council of Churches will bring "Nuns on a Bus" to Albany to call for more progressive tax policies.
The Stock Buyback Transfer Tax is a way to ensure that one percenters who benefit most from the new federal tax law pay their fair share in New York. New York State currently REBATES $14 billion a year in Stock Transfer Taxes to brokers. This proposal would capture some of those profits to protect vital state funding.
 “Wall Street corporations have responded to the Republicans’ massive cut in the corporate tax rate by buying back their own stocks.  The richest shareholders get much richer and working people get nothing.  New York State deserves a share of this huge windfall to close the budget deficit and return some of taxpayers’ hard-earned money to ordinary New Yorkers,” said Barbara Bowen, President of the Professional Staff Congress. “ It’s criminal that New York’s great public resources—like the City University of New York—are starved of funds while Trump gives the gift that keeps on giving to the rich.  A stock buyback tax would make a start on setting that right and allow the state to invest in its real future—its young people.”
"I am a 71-year-old retired Wall Street accounting firm office manager. I've been living in a homeless shelter for two years. How is it that I am fighting for something as basic as a home, while living in a state with such immense wealth?" said Nathylin Flowers Adesegun, a member of VOCAL-NY. “While our State leaders are talking about billion-dollar deficits, Wall Street is swimming in cash. Solving homelessness isn’t rocket science, it’s basic mathematics. New York State needs tax policies that make Wall Street pay their fair share, to ensure that we have the resources we need to solve our most pressing crises.”


















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