Sloppy Reporting from The NY Times on Carried Interest Debate
I swore I would go offline for much of Memorial Day Weekend. But I cheated and peeked at my email late Saturday afternoon and discovered an email from a friend saying, “I’m surprised to see you take such a public stance on the capital gains tax rates,” with a link to a New York Times article on the topic.
I read the article in The New York Times on the carried interest debate and was shocked to see my name and a reference to me that read:
“As the Senate Democrats sent signs that they were open to a tax increase, investors and their lobbyists mobilized quickly, warning that the proposal could stifle investments that create jobs. A group of 80 venture capitalists traveled to Boston to urge Senator John Kerry and Representative Barney Frank, Democrats of Massachusetts, to exclude their business from the tax change, according to Jeffrey Bussgang, a partner at the Boston venture capital firm Flybridge Capital Partners.”
Um…here’s the problem. I never spoke to the reporter, David Kocieniewski, who wrote the article (although I later found a voice mail from him). Other than the fact that my name and firm name are accurate, nothing else in that sentence is correct.
I guess this is just another example of sloppy reporting, but I expect better from the New York Times.
Since the reporter never spoke to me, I can only assume that the reporter was referring to a blog post I did regarding a trip to Washington DC (not Boston) with 80 business leaders from Massachusetts regarding an organization I co-chair called the Progressive Business Leader Network. In fact, the trip had nothing to do with carried interest taxes and there were only three or four VCs as part of the business delegation from PBLN. If he had actually read the blog post, he would have realized that it was a trip with a wide range of topics, including cap and trade, innovation investment, deficit reduction and financial reform. We did not meet with John Kerry, although I did report that we talked to Barney Frank about financial reform and that he did articulate his own position that venture capital would be exempted from the carried interest tax.
If I had actually been interviewed for the story, I would have given a more nuanced position.
Because of the Bush tax cuts, two wars, and the recent economic crisis, we are facing the worst long-term structural deficit in US history. If we want to avoid the path of Greece or Spain, we need to act quickly with a blend of (unfortunately) higher taxes and lower spending. The only question is what taxes should go up and what spending should be cut.
In debating what taxes should be increased, we should take a strategic approach. Personally, I’m willing to and expect to pay higher taxes. But having those higher taxes be levied against venture capital investments in small businesses strikes me as self-defeating when it is the single largest job growth area. I’d personally rather see us put in place a carbon tax and/or a gas tax. Perhaps we should reduce the mortgage exemption in order to shift incentives away from home ownership (how’d that work out?) towards investment and job creation.
Anyway, that’s what I would have said if I had actually been interviewed by the New York Times. Next time, I hope they either actually get my point of view, or leave me out of it and let me enjoy my Memorial Day weekend.
Jeff is a partner with Boston-based VC firm Flybridge Capital Partners. Read his past peHUB posts, or follow him on Twitter at www.twitter.com/bussgang.
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James G. Andersen said on June 1, 2010
Just curious – did The Times print a retraction or an apology?
New York Toimes said on June 1, 2010
We gave up on the Times and started the Toimes !
Bill Sampson said on June 1, 2010
Ahhhh….the inconvenience of being both wealthy and highly visible. Sorry buddy.
Jeff Bussgang said on June 2, 2010
Update for folks – the NYTimes reporter called me yesterday to apologize. He was very gracious and confessed that he was under deadline and simply made a mistake. I expect a correction to be published today.
Skip said on June 2, 2010
“under deadline and made a mistake” — yup. classic journo dodge. don’t blame me, blame the system. i’ll just misread and misreport *what you wrote in a blog* and publish it in the world’s leading newspaper. and they wonder why they are losing readers, money and influence?
Jason said on June 2, 2010
Had it been on a blog that this happened, and not the world’s leading newspaper, we’d be yawning. Hopefully the reporter at the Times learned a lesson.
Lefty said on June 2, 2010
“Because of the Bush tax cuts, two wars, and the recent economic crisis, we are facing the worst long-term structural deficit in US history.” So its all Bush’s fault? Runaway entitlements and the massive growth of the Federal Government have nothing to do with it? Clearly Bush has also caused all the problems in Greece, Portugal, Spain, and Italy…..
Yawn….hearing that you support higher taxes is no surprise, nor is the fact that the NYT would want to use you as a source, as your “blame Bush for everything /must raise taxes” mentality is exactly in line with theirs….
Dennis said on June 3, 2010
Yet another example of “Don’t tax you, don’t tax me, tax that guy behind the tree.” There are two great memes from VC’s today. First, there are too many funds out there, resulting in lots of dumb money chasing deals and pushing up valuations. Second, increasing the tax on carried interest will kill VC investing. So which is it? Maybe VC’s should be happy for the tax increase as it will slow the entry of people trying to be VC’s and lesson the competitive environment. I doubt it, though. The alternative is to get a real job that’s taxed 100% as ordinary income. And don’t forget, the change in tax has zero impact on the LP’s. You know, the ones that actually supply the capital for the investment.
Bob Green said on June 4, 2010
Here’s a novel idea. Try checking your voice mail and returning calls from reporters within 24 hours. Other people who are just as busy and important as you manage to do this regularly without an executive assistant. This would help alleviate the deadline problem, wouldn’t it? The reporter is not out of line by paraphrasing your blog posts and attributing the paraphrase to you. You may not agree with his interpretation of what you wrote, but if he gave you the opportunity to comment and you didn’t respond, what cause do you have to whine?
louisville multiple listing said on September 6, 2010
Hey,
I wanted to let you know that I have been reading for a while and I would like to sign up for the feed. I’ll give it a try but I will need some help. This is a good find and I would hate to lose contact, and maybe never find it again.
Anyway, thanks again and I look forward to posting again sometime!
LA Headshots said on March 13, 2011
I’m glad the NYTimes reported apologized-
Andrew Feeney said on May 3, 2011
You can be right, but I think that better stay neutral to this case.