Daily Must-Reads November 27
USA Today: Are we living in the Hunger Games?
You know the story: While the provinces starve, the Capital City lives it up, its wheeler-dealer bigshots growing fat on the tribute extracted from the rest of the country.
We don't live in The Hunger Games yet, but I'm not the first to notice that Washington, D.C., is doing a lot better than the rest of the country. Even in upscale parts of L.A. or New York, you see boarded up storefronts and other signs that the economy isn't what it used to be. But not so much in the Washington area, where housing prices are going up, fancy restaurants advertise $92 Wagyu steaks, and the Tyson's Corner mall outshines -- as I can attest from firsthand experience -- even Beverly Hills' famed Rodeo Drive.
Chicago Tribune: CPS boss proposes 5-year moratorium on school closings
Trying to help sell drastic school closings this year, Chicago Public Schools is planning to commit to a five-year moratorium on shuttering schools starting in fall 2013. New schools CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett announced the commitment to a moratorium Monday at a City Club luncheon.
The New York Times: Norquist Says Some Republicans Are Having ‘Impure Thoughts’ on Taxes
Grover Norquist on Monday found a new way of dismissing a handful of Republican lawmakers — including the House majority leader — who are now publicly wavering about the pledge they signed to never vote for a tax increase.
WSJ: Republicans and the Tax Pledge
One of the more amazing post-election spectacles is the media celebration of Republicans who say they're willing to repudiate their pledge against raising taxes. So the same folks who like to denounce politicians because they can't be trusted are now praising politicians who openly admit they can't be trusted.
The New York Times: Mortgage Interest Deduction, Once a Sacred Cow, Is Under Scrutiny
A tax break that has long been untouchable could soon be in for some serious scrutiny.
Reuters: Warren Buffett calls for a minimum tax on the wealthy
Warren Buffett, the legendary investor who changed the debate about U.S. tax reform in 2011 with a call for the rich to pay more, is now calling for minimum tax rates for millionaires.
Forbes: The U.S. Supreme Court Allows New Challenge To Obamacare To Go Forward
Under the heading of “it’s not over until it’s over”, the United States Supreme Court has vacated a decision by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, ordering the appellate court to hear arguments on the constitutionality of two key provisions of the Affordable Care Act.
Reason: Treat the Tax-Me-More Crowd to a Voluntary Additional Tax
As the clock ticks toward a tax increase scheduled to take effect at year end, expect to hear a lot from the “tax me more” crowd.
These are wealthy individuals who profess to favor increases in their own tax bills. A series of recent articles help define the genre, which was pioneered by Warren Buffett last year in his New York Times op-ed piece that ran under the headline “Stop Coddling The Super-Rich.”
The Hill: Obama faces huge challenge in setting up health insurance exchanges
The Obama administration faces major logistical and financial challenges in creating health insurance exchanges for states that have declined to set up their own systems.

Daily Must-Reads November 26
Crain's Chicago Business: Unions have a new enemy — their own members
Multinational corporations have a new ally in their battles with organized labor: unionized workers.
As
organized labor loses leverage in a race-to-the-bottom global market,
some workers are becoming so disillusioned by what their unions can, or
rather can't, do for them that they want out. The disaffected include
dozens of machinists at Caterpillar Inc.'s plant in Joliet who crossed
the picket line during a strike last summer and are planning unfair
labor practices complaints against the union.
CNBC: Morgan Stanley’s Doom Scenario: Major Recession in 2013
The
global economy is likely to be stuck in the “twilight zone” of sluggish
growth in 2013, Morgan Stanley has warned, but if policymakers fail to
act, it could get a lot worse.
Points and Figures: The Keynesian Way To Rebuild America
My
mayor, Rahm Emanuel penned an editorial for the Washington Post. In
it, he advocates bringing the Chicago way to the rest of America. I
would disagree. Say what you will about the corruption in Chicago-and
it’s rampant-but the logic behind the Chicago Way is not the way
forward. The Chicago Way is not out of the box thinking. It’s more of
the same.
WSJ: The Fiscal Cliff Drama, in Infographics
The
“fiscal cliff,” when a package of spending cuts and tax increases is
set to go into effect unless the White House and Congress negotiate an
alternative, is fast approaching. Here’s a look at the players, their
positions and the fallout if a deal isn’t reached.
NBC: Feds say teachers hired stand-in to take their certification tests
It
was a brazen and surprisingly long-lived scheme, authorities said, to
help aspiring public school teachers cheat on the tests they must pass
to prove they are qualified to lead their classrooms.
NBC Chicago: Lawmakers Face Gambling, Prisons, Assault Weapons
Lawmakers
will be staring down some of the higher-profile issues in Illinois when
they begin their fall session Tuesday. But resolution of gambling,
state facility closures, immigration and medical marijuana proposals
could come in the form of dramatic confrontation, negotiating-table
settlements, anticlimactic if symbolic votes, or no decisions at all.
Do You Live in a Death Spiral State?
Thinking
about buying a house? Or a municipal bond? Be careful where you put
your capital. Don’t put it in a state at high risk of a fiscal tailspin.
Eleven
states make our list of danger spots for investors. They can look
forward to a rising tax burden, deteriorating state finances and an
exodus of employers. The list includes California, New York, Illinois
and Ohio, along with some smaller states like New Mexico and Hawaii.

Daily Must-Reads November 25
CNBC: The Millionaires Who Pay the Highest Tax Rate
Warren
Buffett and Mitt Romney have managed to create one of the enduring
myths of our tax debate: that the rich pay a lower rate than the rest
of America.
The Washington Post: How to rebuild America
Rahm
Emanuel, a Democrat, is mayor of Chicago and represented Illinois’ 5th
District in the U.S. House from 2003 to 2009. He was White House chief
of staff from January 2009 to October 2010.
Too
much post-election analysis has focused on voter demographics and
campaign mechanics, leaving Democrats in danger of drawing the wrong
lessons from our electoral success.
Northwest Herald: Quinn could play Santa Claus by reforming state tax code
If Gov. Pat Quinn is looking to moonlight during the holiday season, he ought to consider becoming a gift wrapper at Sears.
After
all, the governor promised the retail giant $150 million in subsidies
within the last year. He might as well have tied it with a bow on top.
Welcome to the goofy world of Illinois corporate welfare.
Examiner Editorial: If top 5% paid 40% of taxes, what is their 'fair' share?
But
income taxes, taken in isolation, do not tell the whole story, because
lower-income Americans do pay payroll taxes. But even taking into
account all forms of taxation, the top 1 percent still paid 22 percent
of federal taxes while earning just 13.4 percent of household income.
The top 5 percent paid 40 percent of all federal taxes, despite earning
only 26 percent of all income. No matter how you slice the numbers,
it's hard to understand why anyone would think the wealthy aren't
already shouldering a burden commensurate with their blessings.
The Economist: Poking Walmart, choking Twinkies
Why America’s private-sector unions are in decline
THEY
lined up near the TV cameras, waving signs that read “On Strike”. Many
wore the lurid T-shirts of OUR Walmart (Organisation United for Respect
at Walmart), the group organising the protest.
Built in Chicago: Tons of tech jobs and not enough takers
Millions
of Americans are unemployed and businesses are looking to cut costs by
letting people go. But in this tough economic climate, there is one
industry starving for talent and fresh workers: web and technology
development. Brandon Passley, founder and owner of Vokal, a Chicago
application engineering company, is one of the many entrepreneurs and
managers struggling to fill positions in his field.
