Here’s how private equity got relief in Democrats’ healthcare, climate and


The bipartisan duo of Sens. Kyrsten Sinema and John Thune helped private equity firms escape tens of billions of dollars in potential tax increases and instead walk away with relief from the new 15% corporate minimum tax in the Inflation Reduction Act.

The House of Representatives is expected to vote on the bill Friday after the Senate OK’d the measure on Sunday. The wide-ranging legislation addresses healthcare, climate and taxes, and comes after President Joe Biden’s more expensive Build Back Better proposal stalled on Capitol Hill.

See: What the Democrats’ bill does for climate change, drug prices and corporate taxes

The House vote comes after a flurry of activity that enveloped the private equity industry, which comprised about 6.5% of U.S. GDP in 2020, according to a study.

Earlier versions of the bill would have generated $14 billion a year by closing the so-called carried interest tax loophole. It allows private equity managers to tax profits from the sale of portfolio companies as capital gains, not income. Capital gains taxes top out at 20% while the top bracket for income remains 37%.

Sinema, an Arizona Democrat who has drawn campaign support from private equity firms, managed to use her leverage to keep the carried interest tax loophole intact. Democrats needed 50 votes to pass the bill under the so-called reconciliation process, meaning the party couldn’t lose a single senator in the evenly divided Senate.

At a press conference on Friday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York said lawmakers had no choice other than removing the measure.

See: ‘We expect it to be removed’: Democrats’ push to close ‘carried interest loophole’ in jeopardy as Sinema seeks to block effort

To make up for the potential tax revenue, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, included language to require private equity portfolio companies controlled by private equity firms or funds with more than $1 billion in income to pay the 15% corporate minimum tax.

On Sunday, South Dakota Republican Thune said the measure would have generated $35 billion in taxes from separate businesses of any size held by funds or partnerships. It would have subjected each respective company to the new tax even if its own income is too low, Thune said.  More than 18,000 small- and medium-sized businesses in the U.S. that employ 11.7 million workers faced higher taxes, Thune said.

On Sunday, the Thune amendment that would prevent companies to aggregate their income to determine if they must pay the 15% corporate minimum tax passed the Senate by a vote of 57 to 43. Sinema and six other Democrats voted “yes.”

The measure was followed by a vote of 51 to 50 to compensate for the lost tax revenue by capping tax deductions at $250,000 for “pass through” companies, or units of larger entities that would include private equity portfolio companies.

The American Investment Council,…



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