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France tax plans have tycoons squabbling
A SHARP-TONGUED public dispute has broken out between two of Europe's most prominent tycoons over a proposed French tax on the superrich.
Edouard de Rothschild, the multimillionaire stakeholder of French newspaper Liberation, is defending the left-leaning daily's stinging criticism of Europe's richest man, who is seeking citizenship in Belgium, where taxes are lower.
Rothschild, a member of the famed European banking dynasty, said the controversial headline on Monday that told Bernard Arnault, the CEO of fashion giant LVMH who's worth an estimated US$41 billion, to "Get lost, rich jerk" amounted to a "beautiful marketing operation."
It accused Arnault of trying to dodge the Socialist government's planned 75 percent tax on the highest earners - a charge he vehemently denies.
Liberation continued the onslaught yesterday, wrapping its edition in a four-page special cover plastered top to bottom with promotions for Yves-Saint Laurent - an archrival of top LVMH fashion houses Christian Dior and Louis Vuitton.
Regrouped
The paper compares Arnault to the "nobles and opulent bourgeois" hostile to the 1789 French Revolution who, in a bid to keep their fortune, regrouped outside of France.
"I thought the front page of Liberation was shocking. One mustn't insult people," said Paris resident Audrey Palierne yesterday. Arnault, certainly, was not amused.
Via LVMH on Monday night, he announced he's suing the paper for "public insult" - over the offending headline's "vulgarity and brutality."
But Rothschild, who owns a majority stake in Liberation, later said on French television that he was "unshocked" by the headline, accompanied by a full-page image of a smug-looking Arnault ready to jet off with a packed suitcase.
It was, he said, in keeping with the "provocative style" of the newspaper - a leftist periodical co-founded in 1973 by philosopher and political activist Jean-Paul Sartre.
But then the gloves came off.
In an obvious jibe at the fashion magnate, whose patriotism was publicly questioned by French President Francois Hollande over the weekend, Rothschild said he would pay taxes in France "wholeheartedly."
"It seems to me that when the richest people are asked to make an ... effort of national solidarity, you agree to it," he added. "I'm naturally concerned."
Edouard de Rothschild, the multimillionaire stakeholder of French newspaper Liberation, is defending the left-leaning daily's stinging criticism of Europe's richest man, who is seeking citizenship in Belgium, where taxes are lower.
Rothschild, a member of the famed European banking dynasty, said the controversial headline on Monday that told Bernard Arnault, the CEO of fashion giant LVMH who's worth an estimated US$41 billion, to "Get lost, rich jerk" amounted to a "beautiful marketing operation."
It accused Arnault of trying to dodge the Socialist government's planned 75 percent tax on the highest earners - a charge he vehemently denies.
Liberation continued the onslaught yesterday, wrapping its edition in a four-page special cover plastered top to bottom with promotions for Yves-Saint Laurent - an archrival of top LVMH fashion houses Christian Dior and Louis Vuitton.
Regrouped
The paper compares Arnault to the "nobles and opulent bourgeois" hostile to the 1789 French Revolution who, in a bid to keep their fortune, regrouped outside of France.
"I thought the front page of Liberation was shocking. One mustn't insult people," said Paris resident Audrey Palierne yesterday. Arnault, certainly, was not amused.
Via LVMH on Monday night, he announced he's suing the paper for "public insult" - over the offending headline's "vulgarity and brutality."
But Rothschild, who owns a majority stake in Liberation, later said on French television that he was "unshocked" by the headline, accompanied by a full-page image of a smug-looking Arnault ready to jet off with a packed suitcase.
It was, he said, in keeping with the "provocative style" of the newspaper - a leftist periodical co-founded in 1973 by philosopher and political activist Jean-Paul Sartre.
But then the gloves came off.
In an obvious jibe at the fashion magnate, whose patriotism was publicly questioned by French President Francois Hollande over the weekend, Rothschild said he would pay taxes in France "wholeheartedly."
"It seems to me that when the richest people are asked to make an ... effort of national solidarity, you agree to it," he added. "I'm naturally concerned."
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