Jon Talton: How private equity is a risky play for the economy and jobs
A big example is how PE firms led leveraged buyouts of
Nursing homes owned by private equity are struggling to provide care because of the profit demands of their investors. It's part of a broader move by the industry into health care, including buying medical practices and pressuring physicians to cut costs and improve profits.
Even before the pandemic, 10 out of 14 bankruptcies of major retail chains since 2012 involved private equity, according to a report last year from the advocacy group the
The report stated, "In the last 10 years, a staggering 597,000 people working at retail companies owned by private equity firms and hedge funds have lost their jobs. An estimated additional 728,000 indirect jobs have been lost at suppliers and local businesses, meaning
Private equity has also been infamous for buying newspapers and savaging them with cutbacks, especially the hedge fund
And this week came a
To be sure, private equity shops aren't always winners in the game of "financial engineering" musical chairs. Carlyle and its co-investors lost
But more often than not, the reputation of PE is that of looters.
As Sen.
She calls private equity at its worst "legalized looting" and proposed legislation to stop it.
PE wasn't supposed to turn out this way. Or given the tendency of humans in almost any endeavor, perhaps a good idea going bad was inevitable.
It's not quite
In 1946,
For example, in 1957 ARDC invested
Private equity is for wealthy people, so-called accredited investors or qualified purchasers. They take big risks and expect superior returns. That contrasts with publicly traded companies, in which many more people can buy stock.
Private equity grew exponentially in the laissez-faire Reagan years, notably with
The 2010s was "the golden age" of the private equity industry, according to disgraced junk-bond king
In 2006, private equity backed 4,000
According to McKinsey, private assets under management grew by
In the
"That strategy, which embodies a combination of business and investment-portfolio management, is at the core of private equity's success."
That's the way it's supposed to work, and often has in such cases as KKR saving
But the darker examples cited earlier, and so many more, show that private equity is often a destructive force, playing a big role in the losses of jobs and companies that were the heartbeat of hundreds of American cities. Private equity has also helped raise inequality.
In today's low-tax environment, private equity gets big breaks, especially with the much-criticized carried-interest loophole. Through it all, private equity is unregulated -- and if trillions of dollars under management isn't a systemic risk, I don't know what is.
All of which raises the question: Is today's private equity healthy for the economy or in the national interest? Its track record and pernicious method of operating with no watchdog says no.
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