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- <text id=93TT1129>
- <title>
- Mar. 08, 1993: Cooking Up A Political Storm
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 08, 1993 The Search for the Tower Bomber
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LOBBYING, Page 56
- Cooking Up A Political Storm
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The restaurant lobby is stirred up over entertainment deductions.
- Maybe too much so.
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD BEHAR
- </p>
- <p> Roughly half the ceiling at the National Restaurant Association's
- headquarters in Washington has been torn out to make way for
- a new sprinkler system. Though unintentional, it's a fitting
- symbol of President Clinton's proposal to install a 50% ceiling
- on the deductibility of business meals. Unfortunately, nobody
- at this 75-year-old trade association is in the mood for irony.
- "If the government keeps going the way it is, you won't have
- any fine-dining establishments in America," grumbles chief executive
- William Fisher, as he chows down a power lunch at nearby Mo
- Sussman's restaurant. "We are not a special interest. And I
- don't wear Gucci loafers. But what's good for our industry is
- good for the economy."
- </p>
- <p> While most anti-Clinton lobbying groups are lying low (for now),
- the proposed bite on business meals is sparking a four-star
- effort by the restaurant association, which boasts a $21 million
- budget and one of the largest industry PACs in the nation. It
- will be a difficult souffle to concoct, since it's hard to find
- politicians willing to stand tall for $50 lunches. But a week
- before Clinton even announced his plans, the group persuaded
- Congresswoman Barbara Vucanovich of Nevada, where expense accounts
- run wild, to sponsor a bill that would re-establish 100% deductibility.
- Hours before the President's speech, angry restaurant lobbyists
- were telephoning Congress.
- </p>
- <p> The industry points out that up to 30% of its $225 billion in
- receipts comes from deductible business meals. In the early
- 1980s, power lunches were 100% deductible. The Tax Reform Act
- of 1986 sliced that to 80%. "What's going to happen in five
- years?" asks Fisher, who adds facetiously, "Why not just knock
- it out completely and knock out the country's leading retail
- employer?"
- </p>
- <p> But the dire warnings about the potential death of this market
- are not exactly bolstered by the restaurant association's own
- studies. In 1986 it released a report claiming that the 20%
- decline in deductibility would prompt a 6% drop in annual sales
- and job losses of more than 400,000 per year. As a result, the
- argument went, any gains to the Treasury would be more than
- offset by lost revenue from income and sales taxes.
- </p>
- <p> In reality, nobody except the dead stopped eating. Restaurant
- employment jumped from 8 million in 1985 to more than 9 million
- today. Table-service revenues actually jumped in 1986--the
- year of the tax act--and they grew more than 6% a year until
- 1989, when the recession prompted a dip. In 1992 sales began
- to rebound. Of course, high-ticket restaurants in particular
- have taken a beating, but that probably has more to do with
- a general post-1980s decline in lavish spending than it does
- with the deductibility of meals.
- </p>
- <p> Even so, doom-and-gloom media stories are popping up everywhere.
- A week ago, the Boston Globe described its state's restaurant
- business as "limping through the past few years, when about
- one in every five establishments closed their doors," according
- to the Massachusetts Restaurant Association, which is affiliated
- with the national group. What the article failed to mention
- was that for every eatery that failed, a new one was launched.
- </p>
- <p> A sampling of tony restaurants finds that many are doing better
- than their lobbyists would have the public believe. "The 80%
- rule has had little effect on our business, and we expect no
- change at 50%," says Thomas Baldwin, the chief financial officer
- of Quantum Restaurant Group, which owns 46 establishments, including
- the Morton's of Chicago steak houses. "It's now in vogue for
- restaurateurs to state that the tax change will have an adverse
- affect. But we've seen a surge in revenues just since the election."
- </p>
- <p> In West Hollywood even the trend-sensitive Spago thrived after
- the 1986 tax change. "Our best years of the decade were 1988-89,"
- brags owner Wolfgang Puck. Or take the posh Jean-Louis at the
- Watergate Hotel in Washington, where dinners run $90 (excluding
- wine) and where 40% of the weekday customers are writing off
- their meals. "I wasn't hurt at all [by the 1986 act]," says
- owner Jean-Louis Palladin. He suspects that the new plan could
- cream someone like Roberto Donna, the owner of nearby Galileo,
- where 80% of the lunchers are lawyers. Yet Donna isn't bellyaching
- either. "Maybe we'll lose 10% of the business, but we'll make
- it up at dinner," he sighs. "Democrats are excellent customers."
- </p>
- <p> In the end, the deductibility debate will not be decided by
- facts and revenues, for at its core are the more peppery issues
- of politics and fairness that have long made the "three-martini
- lunch" a hot topic. "A businessman often needs a congenial atmosphere
- away from the office in which to make his or her pitch," points
- out Jerry Berns, the 86-year-old co-founder of New York City's
- "21" Club. Moreover, it does seem unfair to penalize a hardware
- salesman showing a catalog to a client while sipping Sanka,
- yet allow a movie mogul to fully deduct a $3,700 ride on the
- Concorde and a $600 bungalow at the Beverly Hills Hotel. On
- the other hand, it isn't Sanka-sipping salesmen but well-fed
- executives who most savor the deduction and spark the most resentment.
- And after all, why should a single nickel be deductible at a
- place like The Men's Club, a lavish topless joint in Dallas,
- where up to 25% of the clientele are on expense accounts?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-