Page 8-Friday, June 1, 1979-The Michigan Daily Carter discloses financial info; tax deductions questioned WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter disclosed yesterday that his large Georgia farm has made him a millionaire, despite continuing losses from his family pesiut warehouse. Carter also disclosed that he is having differences with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), which forced him to pay taxes on the value of air travel for his wife and daughter Amy, and which may disallow a $12,000 deduction Carter is claiming for enter- taining his staff. THE PRESIDENT released a 45- page packet of financial information, including his 1978 income tax returns, a detailed statement of personal assets and liabilities, and a copy of a general financial statement he and all other high federal officials are now required to make under a law which took effect this year. Among the disclosures: " Carter's net worth rose from $795,357.74 at the end of 1977 to $1,005,910.25 at the end of last year. White House lawyer RobertLipshutz said the increase was due mainly to the rising value of the nearly 2,000 acres of farmland the president owns in Sumter and Webster counties in Georgia. " The family peanut warehouse, which lost more than $300,000 under the management of the president's brother Billy in 1977, lost another $73,000 last year and currently has a negative value. Carter's trustee and business manager Charles Kirbo, pumped loans of more than $500,000 into the business from Carter's more solvent farming corporation. The warehouse is now managed by Gold Kist Inc., and Billy has completed a course oftreatment for alcoholism at a Naval hospital in Long Beach, Calif. " The IRS billed Carter in April for $2,704.26 in additional taxes after auditing his 1977 returns. They said he should have claimed less of a loss on his warehouse business, and should have paid taxes on the value of air travel for his family members who ac- company him on trips. Carter agreed to pay. "This shows the IRS can be as unreasonable with the president as they are with the rest of us," said presiden- tial press secretary Jody Powell. " Carter is asking the IRS for a quick audit of his 1978 tax returns to see whether it approves a deduction of more than $12,110 which the president is claiming for a "staff party and recep- tion" paid for out of his own pocket. Lipshutz said Carter's accountants were uncertain whether the sum was an allowable deduction, but decided to claim it and call on the IRS for a quick opinion. CARTER REPORTED a net income of $267,195.76 last year, including his $250,000 government salary, $13,440 in interest, $11,466 in dividends, and $3,860 in capital gains, and a net loss from his personal business pursuits. The warehouse lost $73,572.44 last year, which Lipshutz saidl was due almost entirely to interest on loans to' the business from Carter's farming corporation and another loan of more than $250,000 from the National Bank o, Georgia, formerly run by the president's friend Bert Lance. Carter also received more than $20,000 in royalties from his book, "Why Not the Best?" He donated most to un- disclosed charities . Carter paid $91,239 in federal income taxes on his 1978 income. Vice President Walter Mondale, who also released his income tax returns yesterday, paid $25,817 in taxes on in- come of $85,367. t® l I i 41[; t I 'I ', I I I ,I .III \+ _ . i{ li11 I {S ctn ttT,.'S " {+ti,+++al tV{t{t i1j1 - !' I 1 M1 t tn4 ao Rt ' v v tl \,. t o r, :ale i d t t+t t ti+i +t++i+ +t+t! k+,{tt{t t +t I t ;! bElc a. A \ }I l 1 i i '1 -'4 0 - C Economic trends suggest mild recession nearing WASHINGTON (AP) - A key gover- Rice: an economist for Data Resources nment measure of economic trends Inc., of Cambridge, Mass., a private dropped a record 3.3 per cent in April research organization. and some private economists said the David Ernst, an official of Michael nation could be nearing a mild Evans Economics Inc., said the figures recession. are "just one more piece of But a Commerce Department corroborative evidence that the economist called that conjecture recession is here." premature and said the figures "may The only positive signs were stock indicate a healthy breathing spell. We prices and money supply. have to wait until next month to be TRADITIONALLY, the index has more certain," said Theodore Torda. been interpreted as forecasting a possible recession if it declines for THE COMMERCE Department said three consecutive months. When the yesterday the sharp decline in the com- March figure was originally released, it posite index of ten economic indicators was the third month of decline. exceeded the three per cent drop in Sep- However, the Commerce Department tember 1974, during the depths of the yesterday revised March's figure to a last recession. 0.4 per cent increase. The index was The department also reported that down in November, January and orders for manufactured goods slipped February, but up in December as well 6.1 per cent in April after an average of as March. 2.3 per cent increase through the first It had declined for 12 consecutive three months of the year. It was the months during the 1974-75 recession. largest drop in ten years. The index in April stood at 138.7, The April decline in the composite in- compared to 143.5 in March. The base dex was the fourth in the last six mon- year is 1967. ths and comes at a time when many The Commerce Department said the private economists are predicting a slump in factory orders and shipments mild recession during the last half of for April affected virtually every in- 1979. dustry, but particularly durable goods "WE ARE SEEING the beginnings of manufacturers, -including steel mills that mild recession," said Douglas and auto plants. I