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Home Front: Politix
AIG director named to Obama tax task force
2009-03-30
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- One of the people named this week to President Obama's new Task Force on Tax Reform is a member of the AIG board of directors.
Makes perfect sense in a way ...
Martin Feldstein, a professor of economics at Harvard University, has been on the board of American International Group since 1988. He also was a prominent economic adviser to Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush.
Thus demonstrating the point from the Atlantic article yesterday about the revolving door between the financial industry, government and academia ...
Asked about the AIG connection, a senior administration official said Friday that the White House declined to comment on the story.

Like the others named to the tax reform task force, Feldstein also serves on Obama's Economic Recovery Advisory Board, which is headed by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker.
Why does Bambi need two boards then if the membership is the same?
Joining Feldstein on the task force are Laura Tyson of the University of California at Berkeley and a former chairman of President Bill Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers; Roger Ferguson, CEO of TIAA-CREF; and Bill Donaldson, a former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

In a teleconference briefing Wednesday, Office of Management and Budget Director Peter Orszag said Obama believes the "prospective members of the board would be especially well-suited to carry out the mission of tax reform."

The task force's job description is to propose ways to simplify the tax code, reduce tax evasion, close loopholes and make changes in corporate tax breaks. It is to provide recommendations to the president by December 4. No revenue target is being set, but the administration said it is placing two constraints on the group's efforts: Members may not propose tax increases for 2009 and 2010; and beyond 2010, they may not propose tax increases on families making less than $250,000.

A major focus for the task force will be to reduce the estimated $300 billion-a-year tax gap, the difference between what individual and corporate taxpayers owe and what they actually pay.

The announcement of the tax-reform task force drew a cool reaction this week from the top Senate Democratic tax writer. "We'll certainly look at [its recommendations], but we're the Congress, we'll do what we think makes sense," Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus, D-Montana, told reporters.
And more importantly, what gets you re-elected ...
Posted by:Steve White

#5  Why does Bambi need two boards then if the membership is the same?

So they can be paid two salaries for one job?(Graft or bribery, take your pick)
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2009-03-30 20:59  

#4  AIG couldn't have taken on the massive risks of credit default swaps w/out Board approval. Every Board has a compensation committee, so they were doubtless doling out huge bonuses to the CDS masters of the universe -- and themselves, of course.
Posted by: regular joe   2009-03-30 12:03  

#3  "on the board of American International Group since 1988" I hate greedy people too, but if the Hospital that the First Lady worked on the board botched an operatrion, would we then blame her? Same scenario here. This guy was a member of a large board that for the most part hired/fired senoir the CEO and other officers. The derivatives office (cause of collapse) was several chains below that level. Not everyone with AIG was a crook or greedy and most of those are long gone.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2009-03-30 11:29  

#2  Why does Bambi need two boards then if the membership is the same?

So each team can cast the blame on the other team of course.

Is anyone suprised by this - after all we have a tax cheat as a Treasury Secretary. The Obama administration is looking like one of those street hustlers selling a shell game every day.

Watch the hands... watch the hands...
Posted by: CrazyFool   2009-03-30 08:35  

#1  A major focus for the task force will be to reduce the estimated $300 billion-a-year tax gap, the difference between what individual and corporate taxpayers owe and what they actually pay.

Rantburg translation: Eliminating income tax deductions such as home loan interest, charitable giving, real estate taxes, etc. and putting everyone on the short form.
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-03-30 07:42  

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