While the
mainstream media focuses on the advantages and disadvantages of the current
debate on tax legislation, there is one group that has already benefitted
substantially from the endless back and forth; lobbyists. Here is a
brief summary of a report
by Public Citizen looking at
how Washington is still the land of the "Swamp", despite the
President's draining efforts.
To put this posting into
perspective, let's get a bit of background information on one of Washington's
favourite pastimes, lobbying. According to Open Secrets, this is what has
been spent on lobbying on an annual basis since 1998:
This is how many unique, registered
and active lobbyists there are on an annual basis since 1998, pounding
the pavement in Washington, doing their very best to get Congress to see things
their way:
And, last but not least, here is a listing of the top lobbying
clients for 2017 (to October 21) and how much they have spent:
With that background, let's look at
lobbying as it relates to the current tax debate. According to the study
by Public Citizen, a total of 6243 or 56.9 percent of lobbyists currently
actively working in Washington have disclosed that they are working on issues
involving taxation during the first three quarters of 2017 with more than 4200
working specifically on "tax reform". This means that there are
11.7 lobbyists working on some type of taxation issue for each of the 535
Members of Congress.
Let's look at a table showing which
industries have hired at least 150 lobbyists to work on tax issues in the first
three quarters of 2017, keeping in mind that some lobbyists work for more than
one client:
There are also twenty organizations
that have hired at least 50 lobbyists to work on tax issues during the first
three quarters of 2017. Here is list of the top ten hiring organizations
and a sample of the issues that concern them, noting that some organizations
also use in-house employees in addition to outside firms to lobby Washington:
1.) U.S. Chamber of Commerce: 100
lobbyists/2 outside firms - estate tax, corporate tax inversions, repatriation
of multinational business earnings, international competitiveness of corporate
tax, interest deductibility.
2.) Verizon Communications: 97
lobbyists/17 outside firms - corporate tax reform/rates/tax deductions, carried
interest, dividend taxation.
3.) Comcast: 90 lobbyists/23
outside firms - corporate tax rate, bonus depreciation, interest
deductibility.
4.) Anheuser-Busch InBev: 90
lobbyists/19 outside firms - tax reform, interest deductibility, bonus
depreciation
5.) Blue Cross/Blue Shield: 86
lobbyists/14 outside firms - health insurance tax, tax provisions of the
Affordable Care Act.
6.) Microsoft Corp.: 81
lobbyists/16 outside firms - comprehensive tax reform, international tax,
foreign tax credit, R&D tax credit.
7.) General Electric: 65
lobbyists/7 outside firms - corporate tax rate/reform, taxation of
international operations.
8.) Novartis: 65 lobbyists/9
outside firms - comprehensive tax reform, international corporate taxation,
interest deduction, anti-inversion tax.
9.) Amazon: 64 lobbyists/6 outside
firms - corporate tax reform, international tax issues.
10.) NCTA the Internet and
Television Association - 64 lobbyists/12 outside firms - reducing tax rates
across the board, tax reform issues, interest deductibility, estate tax repeal.
As you can see from this posting,
the lobbying sector is already one of the beneficiaries of the ongoing (and
seemingly endless) tax debate that paralyzes Washington on a regular basis.
While it seems to be a rule of thumb that changes to the tax regime
benefit the wealthy among us, we can clearly see that the lobbyists and
lobbying firms in America benefit substantially from Washington's paralysis
when it comes to changing the tax code.
At the very least, the "Swamp" is alive and
doing well from the perspective of the lobbying industry.
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