'Millionaires tax' threat has some NY bankers, managers eyeing exits
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[April 07, 2021] By
Svea Herbst-Bayliss
BOSTON (Reuters) - For decades New York's
bankers and fund managers have accepted the city's high tax rates as a
part of working in the world's premier financial capital.
But with plans afoot to raise rates as part of a New York state budget
agreement, some financiers are exploring exits, emboldened by a pandemic
that has illustrated how working on Wall Street may no longer mean
working from Wall Street.
"I'm already looking for an apartment in Florida," said one highly paid
person at a top-tier bank who asked not to be identified because his
employer does not yet know of his plans to move.
Others earning more than $1 million are considering still bolder steps
such as moving not only themselves but also their entire investment
firms out of the city, arguing higher taxes cut into their ability to
pay staff.
A proposal making its way through New York's state legislature would
have top New York City earners paying up to 15.73% in combined state and
city taxes.
New York state's income tax rates currently range from 4% to 8.82% and
New York City's tax ranges from 3.08% to 3.88%, leaving the top earnings
paying closer to 12.7%.
Dubbed the "millionaires tax," the proposal would add surcharges to
people earning more than $1 million a year and beat out California
localities to claim the country's highest combined tax rate.
Some among those who make $1 million or more, putting them in the higher
tax bracket, are saying the city's cultural offerings, which were long a
salve, no longer outweigh the benefits of lower tax locations like
Florida, Utah or Texas, especially given the success of remote working
during the pandemic.
PASSAGE SEEMS LIKELY
The tax proposal, which seems likely to pass, is the culmination of a
battle between progressive and moderate Democrats. Until recently New
York Governor Andrew Cuomo resisted the millionaires tax.
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A woman walks past JPMorgan Chase & Co's international headquarters
on Park Avenue in New York July 13, 2012. REUTERS/Andrew Burton
(UNITED STATES - Tags: BUSINESS LOGO CRIME LAW)/File Photo
The political dynamics have made the extensive lobbying efforts of businesses
and wealthy individuals all but moot.
Large financial companies including Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Virtu Financial Inc
and hedge fund Elliott Management have already said they are moving some staff
out of New York.
Big companies will probably not abandon their New York headquarters for tax
reasons altogether, but some of their staff and smaller firms, like hedge funds
that employ only dozens of people, might, sources said. "This is real," one of
the smaller fund managers said. "This creates an overwhelming incentive to
move."
Last month, a group of business leaders, including those of JPMorgan Chase & Co,
Citigroup Inc and BlackRock Inc, took the unusual step of issuing a public
letter warning that rich people would move out of New York if a major tax
increase came to fruition.
It said companies may have to move staff out of New York because their top
talent does not want to be taxed at high levels. Some companies already have
initiated moves for expense and corporate tax purposes, said people familiar
with the moves.
"When wealthy people don't like something, they don't protest, they just leave,"
said Geoffrey Weinstein, a tax attorney at Cole Schotz.
"The wealthy are under attack and they are seeing if there isn't a way to lop
off 15%. They are looking for options."
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Howard
Goller)
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