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Silicon valley tech titans fear tax burden

A tech tax proposal is the latest manifestation of resentment against proliferation of high-paid tech workers and on rising residential prices

Silicon valley tech titans fear tax burden

Thomas Fuller San Francisco
Maria Poblet, who leads an organisation that assists Latino families facing eviction in San Francisco, says she appreciates the philanthropy that the city's technology companies do in far-flung places to address global poverty and the environment. But what she really wants to see them do is pay more taxes to help with homelessness and lower-cost housing in San Francisco.

"You have a CEO who cares about kids in Ghana one week or dolphins the next week. Those are important," she said. "But the people impacted by displacement in San Francisco are a worthy cause, too."

Poblet is part of a group of activists behind an initiative by three city legislators to impose a payroll tax that would apply only to technology companies, which have been the engine of a booming economy that now appears to be slowing.

Eric Mar, a member of the city's Board of Supervisors, announced the proposal last week for a 1.5 per cent payroll tax that would serve as a form of indemnification for what he described as the downside of the technology boom. Tech companies have been "a tremendous benefit to the city in many ways," Mar said. "But I don't think they've been paying their fair share."

The proposal for what has become known as the tech tax comes as officials struggle to fill growing gaps in the city budget. Money from the tech tax would go toward paying for programmes for the homeless and the housing "affordability crisis," Mar said.

Behind the proposal is more than just an effort to raise revenue. The tech tax, the passage of which is considered a long shot, is the latest manifestation of resentment here against the proliferation of high-paid tech workers and the pressures that rising prices have put on residents. Tensions have flared over the notion that tech workers live in a parallel society, in which they are whisked in private buses to work, socialise in their own circles and do not participate in San Francisco's traditions of social collaboration.

"Billions of dollars of venture capital have poured into the city and pushed our people out," said Poblet, the executive director of Causa Justa/Just Cause, a nonprofit organisation that, among other activities, helps San Francisco residents threatened with eviction.

She and other supporters of the tax say the proposal sends a message to tech companies that they should be paying more to mitigate the repercussions of the boom in their sector, especially the precipitous rise in housing costs brought on partly by the influx of their employees, whose average salary is around $150,000 to $200,000, according to Ted Egan, the chief economist of San Francisco.

Technology companies have remained silent on the matter.

A spokeswoman for Twitter, Natalie Miyake, said the company had decided not to comment on the tax. San Francisco's Budget, which, at $9.6 billion, is larger than a number of state Budgets, is around 7 per cent higher than last year's, Egan said.

The office of Mayor Edwin M Lee, which faced an unusually large deficit projection of $250 million over the next two years, is counting on voters to pass a sales tax increase in November to help pay for transit and homelessness projects and to help balance the budget, which is required by law.

Making ends meet, however, will be a struggle. One significant source of revenue, real estate transfer taxes, is expected to fall sharply.

The budget projects $235 million in property transfer taxes, down 14 per cent from last year, a decline that Benjamin Rosenfield, the city controller, attributed to a drop in large commercial real estate transactions.

"You can see signs of cooling," Rosenfield said about San Francisco's economy. "The question is: When will things turn south?"From 13 per cent growth in hiring last year, tech companies are increasing staff size at a rate of just under 3 per cent this year, Egan said. The median price of a home in San Francisco fell 13.3 per cent from April to May, to a little over $1.1 million, according to the research firm CoreLogic. On an annual basis, prices have declined 2 per cent.

"It's definitely a slowdown," Egan said.

The tech tax, which could raise up to $140 million annually, according to Mar's office, is often described by its supporters as a way to recoup tax breaks accorded to Twitter and other companies that agreed five years ago to move to a gritty neighbourhood known as Mid-Market as part of a municipal development plan. Twitter received the tax breaks after threatening to leave the city, creating resentment among tech companies in other parts of the city that did not get such incentives.

But it seems unlikely that the tax will be enacted. The proposal, which would need the support of six of the 11 members of the Board of Supervisors to be placed on the ballot in November, has the public support of just three. Even if the board approves the measure, it would require the approval of two-thirds of voters in November to take effect.

Skeptics say it is difficult to define what a tech company is, and they criticise the measure for singling out companies based in the city while the giants of Silicon Valley are not affected - even though thousands of their employees live in the city and have contributed to the income inequality and high housing costs.

"This tax on technology jobs will not help our housing crisis," said Scott Wiener, a member of the Board of Supervisors who opposes the measure. "It won't make housing less expensive. It won't reduce the number of homeless people. What it will do is chase away good-paying jobs and erode our tax base."

Tensions over tax revenue are likely to increase if the slowdown in the technology sector persists or worsens. San Francisco's economy is still growing, but at a significantly slower pace than at the height of the boom, which is now in its sixth year.

Melissa Whitehouse, the acting budget director, cautions that the city must plan for higher-than-expected retirement contributions for 30,800 employees and other long-term costs. The city's five-year budget plan predicts steadily increasing shortfalls. If the sales tax increase is not approved by voters, the city will be forced to make cuts.

"I talked to the mayor a lot about how we didn't have as much money this year," Whitehouse said.

©2016 The New York Times News Service
 

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First Published: Jul 06 2016 | 12:20 AM IST

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