1 / 11

Why Do Really Bad Ideas Diffuse Among States: The CAPCO Experience

Why Do Really Bad Ideas Diffuse Among States: The CAPCO Experience. Julia Sass Rubin, Ph.D. Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning & Policy Rutgers University EARN Conference - September 13, 2011. Certified Capital Companies (CAPCOs) . Insurance tax credit program

freira
Download Presentation

Why Do Really Bad Ideas Diffuse Among States: The CAPCO Experience

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Why Do Really Bad Ideas Diffuse Among States: The CAPCO Experience Julia Sass Rubin, Ph.D. Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning & Policy Rutgers University EARN Conference - September 13, 2011

  2. Certified Capital Companies (CAPCOs) • Insurance tax credit program • Began in Louisiana in 1988 • Between 1997 – 2005 diffused to: • Alabama Colorado • Florida Georgia • Missouri New York • Texas Washington DC • Wisconsin

  3. How CAPCOs Work • State provides $100 million in tax credits to insurance companies • Insurance companies lend $100 million to CAPCOs • CAPCOs invest $50 million in 10 year zero coupon bonds to repay that loan • CAPCOs lend/invest other $50 million to in-state businesses, until amount loaned/ invested equals $100 million • CAPCOs “de-certify” and keep all the money not repaid to insurance companies

  4. What does the State get? • "I think this state would be hard pressed to design a program that cost the taxpayers more and delivered less.“ Bob Lee, head of Colorado's Office of Economic Development, which administered the CAPCO program • "It's a scam…I don't think there's anyone who thinks this is a good deal for Colorado, with the exception of those companies who lined their own pockets.“ Mike Coffman, former Colorado State Treasurer who is now a Congressperson

  5. What does the State get? • Poor quality loans/investments • Demonstration of prior success not required for CAPCO managers • Incentives for low risk and quick repayment • Extraordinarily expensive • Normal venture investors: • repaid $100 million investment • earn 80% of profits • CAPCO states receive $0

  6. What does the State get? • Empty promise to “create and foster a local venture capital infrastructure” • Louisiana spent >$630 million 1989 to 1999 • Attracted < 1/1000% of US VC $ from 2000 to 2003 • May price out indigenous VC • Effective alternatives exist • Fund of Funds • InvestMD

  7. Why Do States Sign Up? • Solution in search of a problem • Venture Capital? Economic Development? • Flexibility • Change name and terms; keep basic model • Legislators do not understand • How venture capital works • How CAPCOs work

  8. Why Do States Sign Up? • Expensive and effective lobbying • Often well-liked former legislators • Hard-ball politics • Smear/threaten critics • Timing • Push through in final days of session

  9. Requirements for State-Sponsored Venture Capital Programs • Clear objectives • Venture capital or economic development? • Profits or jobs? • Geographic focus: State wide? Rural? Low-income geographies? • Clear criteria for selecting venture funds, based on program goals • Financial returns • In-state job creation • Targeted economic development

  10. Requirements for State-Sponsored Venture Capital Programs • Prioritize • VC funds w/ success investing in-State • Transparent VC selection process • Remove VC selection and investments from political oversight or input • If using tax credits vs. direct appropriations, use competitive monetization process • minimize cost to taxpayers – e.g., InvestMD

  11. Requirements for State-Sponsored Venture Capital Programs • State receive same terms as private-sector • Full return of principle • 80% of any profits • Limits on fees to reflect VC norms • Limited financial commitment up-front • Can reassess before disbursing additional funds

More Related