New proposed Opportunity Zones rules, RFI released by IRS
The IRS released its long-anticipated second tranche of rules on Wednesday, and the regulations provide some clarity around using Opportunity Zones to invest in businesses. Specific examples include details on defining a business’ operations within a zone and funds’ ability to reinvest proceeds. However, further clarification is needed, including around investors’ treatment of interim sales, and additional changes are forthcoming. A partial summary of the 169 pages of new rules follows, and SSTI will provide additional updates as the full implications become clearer. SSTI’s letter to the Treasury on the first set of rules emphasized three areas that required clarity, and the new rules take steps toward all three items. Read more |
FCC announces new tech initiatives
The Federal Communication Commission Chairman Ajit Pai outlined two new initiativesaimed at ensuring U.S. leadership in 5G and continuing efforts to close the digital divide. Pai announced his intent to create the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund, which he indicated would inject $20.4 billion into high-speed broadband networks in rural American over the next decade. The FCC said the fund represents the FCC’s biggest step to close the digital divide and should connect up to 4 million rural homes and small businesses to high-speed broadband networks. However, Route Fifty has reported that the fund is a rebranding of the current Connect America Fund, albeit with higher speeds and more money. Read more
State funding for higher ed only half recovered
State funding for higher education has only halfway recovered in the 10 years since the Great Recession, according to a recent State Higher Education Finance (SHEF) report. The report also found that while higher education funding is stabilizing, the shift to greater reliance on tuition as a revenue source has leveled off, but remains higher than since before the Great Recession. During the Great Recession, appropriations dropped 24.4 percent from the high in 2008 ($8,848 per full-time equivalent enrollment) to $4,489 in 2012 due to enrollment growth without a proportional funding increase. That trend reversed in 2013 as appropriations increased for five straight years, but have remained flat from 2017 to 2018. Read more
Next-gen company ownership: States supporting employees as successors
As the American population ages — by 2035, the country will have more people aged at least 65 than under 18 — so do the country’s business owners. Over the past few years, several studies have attempted to measure how many companies may transition ownership over the next decade, with estimates ranging as high as 10 million small businesses. These studies generally agree that while changes are on the horizon, few companies are even as prepared as having identified a potential successor. Colorado and Massachusetts are stepping into this planning void with a suggestion of their own: transitioning interested small businesses to employee ownership. Read more
Recent Research
Public-sector partnerships help fuel cleantech innovation
As the technology behind renewable energy continues to advance, recent research finds that the public sector plays an important role in catalyzing innovation. This can be seen in three main ways: by funding basic research on renewable energy in all 50 states; by partnering with cleantech startups; and by supporting cleantech clusters through networks, commercialization assistance, and access to capital. Taken together, this recent research suggests that public-sector partnerships can complement industry’s role in growing the green economy at the federal, state and local levels. Read more
Security risks prompt scrutiny of foreign startup investment
Concerns over national security have prompted the Treasury Department’s Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS) to force international investors to divest from two American tech startups, a move that will affect entrepreneurs and investors alike, according to a recent article by from Jeff Farrah of the National Venture Capital Association. Writing in TechCrunch, Farrah notes that historically CFIUS has targeted areas such as ports and real estate, but is beginning to focus its attention on how access to personal data can serve as a national security threat. Read more
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