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- InvestorPlace: 10 Worst Countries for Tax Evasion
12/23/11 - New York Times: A Family’s Billions, Artfully Sheltered
11/27/11 - ArtVoice: The Real Looters
11/27/11 - Think Progress: Average Bush Tax Cut For 1% This Year Will Be Greater Than Average Income Of Other 99%
11/23/11 - Huffington Post: Superfail!
11/21/11 - Nationally syndicated Op-Ed: Holly Sklar, Repatriation Con Games
11/12/11 - Boston Business Journal: Small-business sympathies for the occupiers
11/11/11 - East Valley Tribune (AZ): Small business needs changes from Congress
11/10/11 - CNBC: Small Biz Owners Ask Big Business To Pay Fair Share
11/7/11 - Business News Daily: Many Large Corporations Avoid Paying US Income Tax
11/7/11 - Huffington Post: Small Business Owners Ask Super Committee To Tax Big Corporations
11/4/11 - Columbia Business Report: Small businesses want corporations to pay fair share of taxes
11/4/11 - Reuters: Thirty companies paid no U.S. income tax
11/3/11 - The Hill: Call for Corporate ‘Buffett Rule’
11/3/11 - McClatchy Tribune News: Holly Sklar, Repatriation Con Games
11/3/11 - The Hill: Lew Prince, Trickle down tax cuts: A broken record
10/27/11 - Dow Jones: Small business coalition opposes plan they say rewards U.S. multinationals
10/26/11 - CBS Sunday Morning: A taxing debate: Who should pay more? - Features BSP member Lew Prince
10/24/11 - Minimum wage news at our BUSINESS FOR A FAIR MINIMUM WAGE website
10/24/11 - Small Business Trends: Do Not Reward Job Destroyers With Tax Holiday
10/24/11
Entrepreneur: Is Consumer Protection Good For Small Business?
By Carol Tice
Entrepreneur, March 2, 2010
Business owners are split on whether a proposal to create a new consumer-regulatory agency would be good or bad for small business. Opposition to the proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is being countered by support from many small business owners around the country. The proposal by President Barack Obama to create a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency came last summer, a key point in proposals for regulatory reform intended to prevent any repeat of 2008's financial meltdown. Since then, the U.S. Chamber has trumpeted its objections to the creation of a new stand-alone agency to watchdog mortgage-lending, credit cards and other consumer financial products on its stopthecfpa Web site.
Meanwhile, many small business owners have pressed their legislators to support the CFPA, charging the Chamber represents big business and just the sort of big financial institutions that got the nation into this mess. They've organized their own Web site on the topic, Business For Shared Prosperity www.businessforsharedprosperity.org and have circulated a petition supporting CFPA that has signators from the U.S. Women's Chamber of Commerce, U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, Main Street Alliance and many more. Their point of view: stronger regulation in the credit markets will help prevent future occurrences of the credit crunch that is currently squeezing small business. So the CFPA will be good for small business.
"A Consumer Financial Protection Agency will expose unsafe products and services and encourage accountability and fair competition," the petition states.
On the government side, FDIC chair Sheila Bair has come out in favor, saying a new agency for consumer-finance regulation is needed. Though some will say that's just the natural tendency of big government to ever seek further expansion talking.
Meanwhile on Capitol Hill, the CFPA proposal has been compared to the public option in healthcare--in other words, a nonstarter with Republicans. It may be purged in an effort to get some kind of financial reform through Congress this season.
The next time mortgage lenders decide to offer mortgage loans to anyone with a pulse, or a bank issues a credit card that zaps you with 30 percent interest on money the bank borrowed from the government at nearly 0 percent, it would likely be good if there was a government organ that would nip it in the bud. Opponents of "big government" oppose these type of things and ask us to trust the free market to regulate itself...but we've just seen how that works out.
Copyright 2010 Entrepreneur