I don't appear to have access to the full article (the portion I can access is here; you may be able to read the whole thing), but writerspleasure points out that Sen. Chris Dodd's financial reform bill includes an ill-conceived measure that would place severe restrictions upon "angel" investors funding startups.
I don't know, and won't speculate, why Sen. Dodd is doing this, except to ask cui bene, but as pointed out in writerspleasure's post, this would be a disaster. Startups funded by angel investors are less than 1% of all companies operating in the US, yet account for around 10% of new jobs, in addition to being one of the major sources of innovation in the US.
This measure sounds as though it would be tantamount to taking an already-staggering startup segment of the economy out behind the barn and slitting its throat over a bucket.
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The only reason I can see why anyone would want these measures would be to deliberately reduce competition for existing businesses - not just high tech startups but anything else where an external investor might be able to provide startup capital to get a project off the ground.
Furthermore, given that these days the Internet and related technologies mean that development costs have diminished, these changes seem almost designed to make lowcost alternatives to large VC funded startups non-viable. I do almost wonder whether the sponsors of this segment of the bill are actually large VC firms.
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