Sarah schotton , senior designer , describes the policy as " business sexy " : " we 're supposed to dress smartly and sexily like the brand so that means high heels , make-up and dressing up , and no jeans and no trainers . "
Alan viard , an economist at the american enterprise institute , a conservative think-tank , describes the bill far less sexily : " it boils down to a partial rollback of the preferential rate for long-term capital gains . "