Albuquerque Journal

We must continue to invest in our economy

Investment­s in education, broadband and business are needed to recover from pandemic

- BY BRIAN O’LEARY AND LIDDIE MARTINEZ NEW MEXICO ECONOMIC RECOVERY COUNCIL Brian O’Leary is senior vice president, tax counsel to NBC/Universal Albuquerqu­e. Liddie Martinez is president of the Los Alamos Region and director of community engagement for Ent

As the administra­tion of Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham continues to carefully follow through on its plan for gradually reopening the New Mexico economy, it’s time to start focusing our attention further out on the horizon.

The first order of business should be to extend a helping hand to the many homegrown, small businesses struggling to recover from the damage inflicted by COVID-19. Federal aid has been helpful, but more needs to be done. The Economic Recovery Council has supported the developmen­t of a new lowinteres­t loan program likely to be considered in this week’s special session. We strongly encourage the Legislatur­e to take this step.

Next is the long-term health of our economy. There’s no denying the pandemic hit us with a body blow, so it’s important we regain the momentum we had going into 2020.

Before the first case of COVID-19 was diagnosed in New Mexico, the state’s economy was growing far faster than the rest of the United States. New Mexico’s private-sector job growth was in the top 10 nationally, GDP was fourth nationally and both personal income and wages were accelerati­ng.

This progress was a long time coming. After the Great Recession, New Mexico’s job growth was almost dead last among the 50 states. Young profession­als were leaving, education in hand, for opportunit­ies elsewhere.

Among the factors that turned the state around were investment in business expansion and relocation and workforce training through two signature economic developmen­t programs, LEDA and the Job Training Incentive Program. This has been wise and strategic spending by the Legislatur­e and planning by the Lujan Grisham administra­tion, and now is not the time to go backward.

Both programs have helped New Mexico attract companies with global footprints: NBCUnivers­al, Netflix, Facebook and most recently SoftBank’s planned investment at Spaceport America. The assistance also has helped homegrown companies add employees and expand, including a family ranch, meat processors, and local breweries and wineries.

This assistance is the backbone of a stronger economy and higher salaries. The investment­s the state of New Mexico has made from the LEDA fund since Gov. Lujan Grisham took office have created jobs with an average annual salary of almost $60,000, compared with a state average of $47,000.

Meanwhile, JTIP grants have trained 2,721 workers at 115 businesses since January 2019 — jobs in agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, bioscience­s, aerospace, film and television. They are jobs that diversify New Mexico’s economy and give our children an opportunit­y to work and raise their families in their own communitie­s.

We must also find a way to accelerate investment­s in broadband and other infrastruc­ture so that all of New Mexico can take part in the 21st century economy. The pandemic has made it painfully obvious how critical informatio­n technology is to a sustainabl­e economy.

Many of the jobs that transition­ed to telework over the last few months likely will stay that way long after we’ve controlled the virus. Attracting new, well-paying jobs and sustainabl­e careers likewise will depend on a workforce that can depend on the infrastruc­ture needed to take part in the new economy.

And then there’s the workforce itself, the real key to building a strong economy. We understand the difficulty legislator­s will face trying to balance a budget hammered by the economic slowdown. But to ensure that slowdown remains short-term, New Mexico must continue its investment­s in education at every level.

We know businesses already here want to hire workers and expand. And we know many outside the state are asking about New Mexico, thanks to its talented, diverse workforce and more appealing lifestyle. But only by investing in our economy will the state be able to get back to stronger job growth and a sustainabl­e recovery.

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