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Yale and other Ivy League schools under fire for hoarding hedge funds, paying managers
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"Last year," Victor Fleischer argued, "Yale paid about $480 million to private equity fund managers as compensation about $137 million in annual management fees, and another $343 million in performance fees, also known as carried interest to manage about $8 billion, one-third of Yales endowment." - photo by Eric Schulzke
A University of San Diego law professor took to the New York Times last week to challenge the tax-exempt status granted to enormous Ivy League endowment funds, particularly in light of the massive fees they pay hedge fund managers to manage those funds.

"Last year," Victor Fleischer argued, "Yale paid about $480 million to private equity fund managers as compensation about $137 million in annual management fees, and another $343 million in performance fees, also known as carried interest to manage about $8 billion, one-third of Yales endowment."

Fleischer wants universities to be required to spend 8 percent of their endowment annually, to discourage the hoarding that leads to these kinds of massive management fees.

Fleischer's argument reflects persistent resentment of elite schools with already enormous endowments that somehow manage to also keep scoring enormous gifts.

A $400 million gift to Harvard earlier this summer, its largest ever, touched off a debate on social needs and tax exemptions.

"Yet for many others, the gift didn't make sense," Inside Higher Ed observed. "They questioned why wealthy donors repeatedly choose to give large sums to the wealthiest university in the world."

After reading the Fleischer op ed, Malcolm Gladwell went on National Public Radio to echo the concerns over the priorities of monied elite schools. Gladwell focused his fire on the tax-exempt status of these enormous endowment funds.

"It's one thing if a school has an endowment of $500 million, that they are stretching a million different ways to meet the needs of their students," Gladwell said, "to say that they should escape taxes to reserve their funds for education. That logic does not hold when you have $35 billion in the bank, as Harvard does."

"I've grown increasingly incensed at the inequality in higher education," Gladwell said. "There are a handful of schools that just have too much money."

Tax dollars currently lost to enormous endowment funds would be better spent on schools that need the money. "Is our education system better or worse off for having a very small number of schools with a massive amount of money and a very large number of schools that are hurting?" Gladwell asked.

Dan Primack at Fortune responded to Gladwell and Fleischer's attacks by noting that "Yale's private equity program currently represents 33% of its endowment, and has generated 15.4% annual returns over the past decade (a better mark than the S&P 500 over the same period).

"Were Yales PE portfolio to make that exact return on its current PE portfolio in its current fiscal year," Primack noted, "the return in hard dollars would be over $1.2 billion. Sure, Yale could pay its private equity managers exactly bupkis, and then be $1.2 billion poorer for its populist pose."

"Private equity is a straw man here," Primack argued. "Set it on fire, and watch the campus burn."
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New Medicare cards are in the mail and scammers are on the prowl
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The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has begun mailing new Medicare Health Insurance ID cards. The program no longer uses Social Security numbers to identify people. - photo by Lois M Collins
The federal government is beginning to send out new ID cards to the 58 million Americans who benefit from Medicare. But since many of the people who will receive them don't know they're coming or why, scammers are already gearing up to take advantage.

An AARP survey shows as many as three-fourths of Americans 65 and older have no idea the cards are coming, so some individuals may be duped with claims that they're supposed to pay a fee or provide personal information that will be used, instead, to defraud them.

The new cards are the first reissue in years, and the most striking part of the redesign is that the cards no longer carry the beneficiary's Social Security number. Congress mandated the removal of that number as an identifier for Medicare beneficiaries by next April. Instead, the card has a Medicare Beneficiary Identifier number, an 11-digit combination of numbers and letters.

The new Medicare cards are now being mailed out in batches, starting with the Eastern seaboard and moving west. Most Medicare beneficiaries will receive their cards over the next six months, as long as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has their correct mailing address. Once the cards are in hand, people can share the new identification number with their health care providers. During a transition period, either card is valid.

The old cards, which used Social Security numbers as the personal identification number, should be destroyed.

AARP recently launched an education campaign to warn consumers about scams related to the new Medicare cards.

The membership organization's "Fraud Watch" consultant, Frank Abagnale reformed con man, scammer and the subject of the movie and book "Catch Me If You Can" tells senior citizens the only time they need to carry the actual Medicare card is to health care appointments. Otherwise, it should be left in a safe place. If they want to carry one in their wallet or purse, he says, make a copy and black out the first seven numbers.

Since the cards were announced, scammers have already:

  • Called seniors and asked for their bank account information so that money on their old card could be returned. There is no money on the old card and CMS never asks for personal information over the phone.
  • Offered to send the new card after Medicare beneficiaries pay a $25 fee to cover expenses related to the card. The card is free.
  • Said the card will be mailed out as soon as the older person verifies his or her Social Security number, mailing address and other personal information. CMS already knows the beneficiary's Social Security number and it's no longer being used in conjunction with health care.
AARP and the Federal Trade Commission will hold a free online seminar about the cards and the fraud attempts they have spawned on Thursday, April 19, at 7 p.m. EDT. Register at: www.aarp.org/FraudWebinar. CMS also offers a "frequently asked questions" guide to the new cards.

The AARP Fraud Watch Network says consumers can sign up for its Watchdog Alert emails that deliver breaking scam information, or call a free helpline at 877-908-3360 to speak with volunteers trained in fraud counseling. Abagnale also hosts a weekly podcast for AARP, called The Perfect Scam.
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