Venture capitalist and “Shark Tank” star Kevin O’Leary has criticized Vice President Kamala Harris’s economic proposals, saying her plan for price controls on groceries is “beyond crazy” and warning that proposed corporate tax hikes could damage U.S. competitiveness.
Don't Miss:
- How do billionaires pay less in income tax than you? Tax deferring is their number one strategy.
- Founder of Personal Capital and ex-CEO of PayPal re-engineers traditional banking with this new high-yield account — start saving better today.
In an interview on Fox News that O'Leary shared on X, formerly Twitter, he spoke about Harris' suggestion of federal intervention in food pricing. “Price fixing—we tried that in the ’70s, that’s beyond crazy,” he said. Can you imagine America where there’s a Ministry of Pricing for Grocery that tells a farmer what an apple can be sold for and what you can buy it for?”
In a campaign speech last week, Harris promised a “first-ever” federal ban on food price-gouging, including “new penalties for opportunistic companies that exploit crises and break the rules.” According to Grocery Drive, the Vice President framed the proposal as a way to support smaller food businesses and increase competition in the industry.
Trending: A billion-dollar investment strategy with minimums as low as $10 — you can become part of the next big real estate boom today.
However, the plan has faced pushback from industry groups. The Food Industry Association (FMI) said it’s “inaccurate and irresponsible to conflate an illegal activity like price gouging – a defined legal term in which specific violations of trade practices law occur – with inflation, which is a broad, macroeconomic measure of increases in consumer prices over time.”
The National Grocers Association (NGA) called the proposal a “solution in search of a problem,” urging stronger enforcement of existing antitrust laws instead.
O’Leary sees Harris’ grocery pricing plan as misguided. In a tweet following his TV appearance, he likened the idea to “pure madness,” warning that a policy like that could lead to “empty shelves, sky-high prices, and lost jobs.”
Trending: The number of ‘401(k)' Millionaires is up 43% from last year — Here are three ways to join the club.
The entrepreneur’s criticism wasn’t limited to price controls. He also aimed at Harris’ proposal to raise the corporate tax rate from 23% to 28%, a move that NBC News reports would generate hundreds of billions in revenue over a decade.
“That’s a 21.7% increase. It takes America’s competitiveness in the G20 down to almost the bottom quartile,” O’Leary said, noting that his stance wasn’t partisan but based on what he considers good and bad policy.
O’Leary’s comments reflect the broader debate about the role of government in managing the economy, particularly in times of stubborn inflation.
While Harris and her supporters argue that stricter regulations could help curb price gouging and ensure fair competition, critics like O’Leary say the measures could stifle economic growth and lead to unintended consequences.
Read Next:
- A billion-dollar investment strategy with minimums as low as $10 — you can become part of the next big real estate boom today.
- Can you guess how many retire with a $5,000,000 nest egg? – How does it compare to the average?
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.