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Corporate Welfare Roulette
There's always a celebration when politicos "win" one of these cash-for-jobs gambles. The media gather, politicos prance, the Chamber of Commerce chief grins from ear to ear and the corporate CEO mouths platitudes about free enterprise (while stuffing taxpayer cash in his pockets).
Only six years ago, Winston-Salem, N.C., had its lucky day, having won the spin of the roulette wheel to land a corporate gem. Dell, the computer giant, was headed to town, pledging to erect a state-of-the-art assembly plant and hire up to 1,500 folks.
"We won," crowed all the local poobahs. They had put down about $318 million in tax giveaways, cash and other freebies to land the prize, and in October 2005, they enjoyed the glorious grand opening of Dell's $7 million plant. The future was bright.
However, one thing that governors and mayors absolutely hate to do is to face up to the fact that their prize has reneged, failing to deliver the promised number of jobs. Real bad politics.
Last October, four years and two days after Dell's gala opening in Winston-Salem, the giant suddenly upped and left! It abruptly announced that it would soon cut out for the cheap-labor havens of Asia, shut down the still-sparkling assembly plant, discard the 900 people it had hired (600 short of its promise) and kiss off North Carolina. Thanks for the memories. Adios, chumps.
Formerly gleeful politicos were now howling, demanding "every red cent of incentive money" back. But they had put down their money and taken their chances, and corporate gods are notoriously fickle.
While much of North Carolina's subsidy had not yet been doled out, taxpayers still took a hit of about $17 million for its fling with Dell. Meanwhile, the roulette wheel continues to spin, and more and more taxpayers across the country are learning that they're getting stiffed, receiving only a fraction of the jobs they were taxed to bring to their area.
This is always embarrassing to the public officials who've so enthusiastically played the game, but leave it to a Texas politico to come up with a slick political fix. When Gov. Rick Perry's corporate job subsidies don't succeed, he simply — abracadabra! — redefines success.
Texas has a long history of governors who have a genetic resistance to ethics, but this guy can't even spell the word.
A watchdog group, Texans for Public Justice, recently exposed Perry's flimflam in a report documenting extensive job shortfalls in his corporate deals. TPJ revealed that Gov. Slick had quietly been "amending" the terms of the contractual agreements that corporations signed to get our tax dollars.
Without even informing the other state officials who supposedly oversee the corporate subsidy fund, Perry eased the job-creation requirements to make the deals look like they are succeeding. Such slackers as Lockheed Martin and Tyson Foods have had their job quotas slashed, been permitted to count part-time jobs as full-time and even been allowed to use foreign workers (and possibly illegal immigrants) rather than Texas citizens to meet their job-creation obligations.
When he learned last month that the TPJ was about to bust his little secret "fix," Perry rushed out a statement lamely insisting that nothing was amiss, that his redefinitions were merely meant to "refresh" the state's job contracts.
Refresh? Why do I feel an urgent need to shower when I hear such a clean word ooze out of the mouth of such an oily politician?
The whole game of Corporate Welfare Roulette is oily. For more information on the scams that come from it — and on what can be done to stop these giveaways — contact Good Jobs First: www.goodjobsfirst.org.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllYet his casino game of incentives will increase as states and communities scramble to find jobs for their people. We will see more sweetheart deals. More failed promises.
Managed to stop a stupid incentive deal locally when Ashland Oil wanted to set up a pilot plant for "clean coal conversion" to gasoline. I pointed out (after digging through a blanket of permits) that the ten year tax deferment was also the lifespan of the operation, leaving a decaying plant site to leak god knows what into a local wildlife reserve. They nixed the project (pissing off my cousin-in-law who stood to make a small fortune off selling the land to Ashland).
Gary
"America is like an unfaithful lover who promised us more than we got.”
-- Charlotte Bunch
Good for you Gary!
Gasoline from coal is what the Germans were forced into during WWII. Coal tar is among the most carcinogenic substance known.
South Africa, taking the technology from the Germans (who got it from the United States!), produced coal-fuel during its embargo. Wonder what happened to those plants?
Gary
"Approximately 80% of our air pollution stems from hydrocarbons released by vegetation, so let's not go overboard in setting and enforcing tough emission standards from man-made sources."
--Ronald Reagan
If they couldn't win fair and square, all they had to do was resort to business bullying to crush the competition. That my friend is the game called "Corporate Welfare".
In NYC, construction is ongoing, despite the fact that we have empty commercial spaces in every nook and cranny of the city. On 6th Avenue, in mid-town, between 42nd and 43rd Streets, they are building a brand new Bank of America Tower. Parts of the building might already be open -- it's hard to tell. I've read that it is a $1 billion project, and the building is 58 stories high, the second tallest building in NYC.
Of course, we need to take into account the fact that "we the people" were forced to bail out this corporation. No doubt, taxpayer funds are subsidizing the banksters. Who knows what sweetheart deals -- corporate welfare -- went into this project!?!
Dell should be fined three times what they cost the state of NC. What a batch of scum.
My favorite kick in the teeth comes when cities give WalMart a huge tax break for showing up and destroying the rest of the community's economic base. Sure, they might hire 150 people, but they put 250 out of business.
This whole idea of giving them tax breaks is slitting your own throat. If huge business shouldn't pay taxes (and 75% of fortune 500 companies pay NOTHING), then why the hell should WE? We make NO profit, they make hundreds of billions in profit. We get taxed on the wages we get paid for working, they pay NOTHING on PROFITS. On the EXTRA money that they don't need to survive on.
When Reagan took office, business paid 36% of all taxes paid in this country. Now, they are down to about 8%. Guess who gets to make up for what they AREN'T paying? You, me, your kids and grandkids ALL get to be screwed so that big business can get off Scott free. And then we give them tax breaks for moving our manufacturing sector off shore, leaving those of us who are paying for this broke and scrapping for rent.
Time to break up the banks, put business back into it's subservient role, and start making these bastards pay for their share of the damage they have done to this country. Make it illegal for a company to bully a town or municipality into tax breaks. You want to do business, you pay taxes. End of story. It's time for HUMANS to matter more than goddamned profits, for the love of God. Money is a tool. Time to stop worshiping that tool and use it for what it SHOULD be used for: the betterment of humankind.
Not only does corporate welfare roulette happen in the USA, but abroad as well. I am a former employee of a Swiss subsidiary of an American corporation that pulled out of the canton (Bern) they were headquartered in just as their 12-year tax holiday was about to expire.
No disrespect to JT, a major fav, but...
900 jobs x an average salary of, say, $30K/year = $27 million/year x 4 years = $108 million employees then spent back into the NC economy.
And it only cost the taxpayers $17 million?
On paper, it just doesn't look like a bad short term gamble/investment, compared to say a 'shovel ready' project that might last 1/2 a year for, say, 25 employees, or 50 maybe...
You are an ass. For years companies made profits without having to get paid off on top of doing their normal business of making a profit from their business operations. Your argument contains major falacies, the greatest of which is that all people in an area should have to PAY for some of them to get a job. You probably think that you are some kind of great American, but in reality, all you are is a part of the problem. Your philosophy encourages the corporate governance that is the basts for this country's decline. I hope that, as our country continues its third world decline, the realization of the idiocy of your pro-corporate attitude causes you to feel the most unreedemable of despairs, something so strong that it follows you beyond death. If i am wrong about corporate governance, i wish you the best and most fulfilling of lives and afterlives. Misery and peace to you, I wish you the best, but think you are the worst.
frank1569, take a close look at al the municipalities in Michigan such as Flint, Pontiac, Highland Park and Detroit who cut tax abatement deals with the big three auto companies, only to have them cut and run to Mexico and China. These cities never saw any profit from these deals, only more demands and threats from the auto companies. So they had to tax the citizens even more.
The State of Michigan has a budget deficit of at least 2 billion dollars. It also has a slush fund of 2 billion dollars which it uses to lure business to the state. Looking at the unemployment rate in the state it would probably be better to use those billions for something else.
Finally, I have to agree with Senator Bernie Sanders, if a city, county or state tries to bribe corporations with taxpayer money that state should lose all of their federal highway funds for that year. That would definitely stop the missuse of taxpayer funds, at least in this matter.
FYI, a little something that I picked up on, Obama and the Dem leadership have buried the reauthorization of the USA Patriot Act in the jobs bill.
first... you compare apples to oranges... the tax subsidies and jobs' promises were to be long term...
the ARRA... is to keep the economy from going completely off a cliff... due to... corporate malfeasance... exacerbated by TAXPAYER bailouts...
next... those new jobs... some may have been filled by people who migrated to the area... others by people... who left other jobs... POOF... now... no jobs... no consumer spending... no real estate taxes... and... state... county subsidies... unemployment... food stamps... medicaid... hospital emergency rooms for routine healthcare...
then there's the support businesses... from lunch shops... to whatever else might have come into existence.. they're kaput...
how about new housing that might now go to foreclosure... falling property values... increased crime... and neighborhood deterioration... not to mention some behemoth of a building... the locals will have to offer the next "jobs maker" even bigger incentives to utilize...
walmart has this down to a science... and... even one iota of a word about unions... they're outta here... not to mention the $27M subsidy walmart got years ago to repave the entrance to their bentoneville ar hq...
finally... it's not a gamble... a game of chance... or a lottery... it's about a functioning... ongoing... society... since the last 30 years... with cheap labor pools opening up... corporations no longer have to play good citizen to the communities that provide the labor that makes them profits...
and... dell... in round rock tx... ships far eastern manufactured low wage components right across the border to nogadoches mx for assembly... at 2$ and hour... then right back... for resale... to YOU... the "consumer"...
so... hope you feel good... on your next purchase... of ANYTHING... that some 10 year old... worked 70 hours a week... lives in squalor... and horrific working conditions... for... "lowest prices always"...
god bless america... because... the $14TRILLION Nat'l Debt... is MATHEMATICALLY IMPOSSIBLE... to pay off... NOTE: 11TRILLION was run up under Republican administrations... starting w/ reagan from <1T... to 4-5T... then dubbah took that and tripled it...
Corporados who destroy the livelihoods of Americans by "outsourcing" (stealing) the jobs and manufacturing capability
of our nation shoud be stripped of their assets except for a new suit and $1,000 and deported to the country where they tried to establish their sweatshops. I know this is only a dream, but it is a most pleasant one.
p.s. I think the $1,000 is too generous, it should be minimum wage rate for the hours it takes to get them out of here! The new suit should also be made in this country.
Right on. Let them "pull themselves up by their bootstraps," as the Republican and right-wing mantra goes.
Unless and until pull-back language is inserted in tax break agreements/legislation, or eminent domain is used on renegers, OR citizens are interested, angry, and organized enough to take matters into their own hands...this is just a bunch of sour grapes.
Years ago, when I was a starry-eyed, free-market libertarian, I read reports by free-market-oriented think-tanks like the (Midwest-based) Heartland Institute--and they were already pointing out how this game was a loser. As one contributer put it, it's like a storekeeper taking money out of the cash register and throwing it out in the street--in the hopes that some of it will be spent in his store!