Forbes magazine released its list of the 400 richest people in America. Four Hoosiers made the list, including:
No. 68. William Cook, 76, worth $4.5 billion accumulated through the medical devices business.
No. 130. Melvin Simon, 80, $2.9 billion from real estate.
No. 286. Dean White, 84, worth $1.7 billion from the billboard and hotel business.
No. 317. Herbert Simon, 72, $1.5 billion from real estate
Only one of these men goes about his business without asking for government subsidies. Can you guess which one it is?
UPDATE: The sad truth is that none of these men can say they've gone about their business without government subsidies. I thought Bill Cook qualified for that distinction, but upon reviewing evidence of subsidies for the French Lick casino, it looks like he too has accepted directed subsidies from the government.
My guess is # 68 William Cook
ReplyDeleteSimon's take money from the tax payers if not direct in the way of subsidy and since the other is in the Hotel business, I would suspect that he also feeds from the public trough. Am I close or did I blow it completely?
I'm guessing Cook.
ReplyDeleteIt's Cook by a long shot. Even his investment in the French Lick casino is in the form of a public benefit corporation he created.
ReplyDeleteYou're wrong. Cook Group received a ten year property tax abatement for a project in Monroe County that they would have built anyway.
ReplyDeleteIf you include tax abatement, you include every significant business in the state of Indiana. I was thinking more in terms of direct subsidies from the government.
ReplyDeleteIf you include tax abatement, you include every significant business in the state of Indiana.
ReplyDeleteThen why did you make a big deal of it when Stephen Hilbert's newest venture received a property tax abatement?
More specifically, I was commenting on this reports in the Star with regard to Hilbert:
ReplyDelete"Haverstick Consulting, the tech and business services company led by ex-Conseco chief Stephen Hilbert, is moving from Carmel to Indianapolis," writes the Star's Erika Smith. "In exchange for relocating, the city of Indianapolis offered property tax abatement worth more than $68,000, and IEDC offered Haverstick up to $30,000 in training grants."
For the already existing business at the same location:
"The state is providing New Sunshine up to $420,000 in tax credits and $92,000 in training grants. The city is providing $126,000 in a property-tax abatement. New Sunshine employs 314 people."