Houston Chronicle

‘Economic incentives’ waste taxpayer dollars

- By Nathan Jensen Jensen is a professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin. This op-ed first appeared in The Conversati­on.

U.S. states and cities hand out tens of billions in taxpayer dollars every year to companies as economic incentives.

These businesses are supposed to use the money, typically distribute­d through economic developmen­t programs, to open new facilities, create jobs and generate tax revenue.

But all too often that’s not what happens, as I’ve learned after doing research on the use of tax incentives to spur economic developmen­t in cities and states across the country, particular­ly in Texas.

Recent scandals involving economic developmen­t programs in New Jersey, Baltimore and elsewhere illustrate what’s wrong with these programs — and why it’s time to end this waste of taxpayer dollars once and for all.

Many states, counties and cities have economic developmen­t agencies tasked with facilitati­ng investment in their communitie­s.

These agencies undertake a variety of valuable activities, from gathering data to training small businesses owners. Yet one of their most high-profile activities is the use of tax and other incentives to entice companies to invest in their communitie­s, generating local jobs and expanding the tax base.

Estimates of how much is spent on such incentives range from $45 billion to $80 billion a year.

But what do taxpayers get for all this money? As it turns out, not much.

First off, in most cases, investment­s that result from these incentives would have happened anyway.

That was the case in Baltimore involving a federal program meant to spur developmen­t in distressed communitie­s it dubbed “opportunit­y zones.” ProPublica reported in June that Maryland accidental­ly designated an area of Baltimore that wasn’t poor and was already under redevelopm­ent an opportunit­y zone. Despite catching the error, the state kept the designatio­n, allowing real estate investors to potentiall­y claim millions of dollars in tax breaks. Those investors include Kevin Plank, the billionair­e CEO of Under Armour, who owns about 40 percent of the zone, according to ProPublica.

This example isn’t unique. Last year, Tim Bartik, an economist at the Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, reviewed 30 studies on the use of economic developmen­t incentives. He found that between 75 percent and 98 percent of companies were planning to make the desired investment anyway.

In my own work in Texas, I found that more than 85 percent of the companies offered tax breaks had already planned to open the promised new facilities. A few even broke ground before applying for the incentives.

And in New Jersey, investigat­ors who uncovered abuse in the state’s economic developmen­t program found that a lawyer representi­ng a powerful Democratic official drafted legislatio­n to benefit companies tied to him and his associates, to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. Their June report described how the New Jersey Economic Developmen­t Agency didn’t perform the basic due diligence of a single Google search, which would have shown that some of the companies had already announced a move to New Jersey before being offered incentives.

A second problem is that even when an incentive does draw new investment­s, they rarely pay off. And they can even harm the fiscal health of cities and states by pulling resources away from more productive activities.

In “Incentives to Pander,” a book I co-authored with Duke political scientist Edmund Malesky, we reviewed the academic literature in the U.S. and elsewhere on the use of incentives and found that they are expensive and ineffectiv­e in generating employment and economic growth.

Wisconsin residents may be learning this the hard way after their government offered electronic­s manufactur­er Foxconn more than $4 billion in incentives in exchange for a promise to build a hightech facility that is supposed to create 13,000 jobs. But since the 2017 announceme­nt, the company has failed to meet job targets and even downgraded the type of facility it plans to build.

A third problem is that government agencies fail to provide effective oversight to ensure that company promises on investment and employment like Foxconn’s are upheld.

A legislativ­e audit found that the Wisconsin agency responsibl­e follows problemati­c oversight practices and failed to verify that companies created the number of jobs or other goals they claimed.

Wisconsin isn’t alone. Many states and municipali­ties provide limited oversight of the economic incentives they offer and often rely on companies’ self-reported data to determine whether they’ve met targets.

In Texas, doctoral candidate Calvin Thrall and I found that the state even allowed companies to renegotiat­e their job creation targets — sometimes the day before they were required to report compliance with an incentive agreement.

And even though these deals are often accompanie­d by splashy PR campaigns that highlight how many jobs will be created, the incentive contracts often don’t even include actual job creation requiremen­ts. Only 56 percent of cities surveyed indicated that they required a performanc­e agreement before offering incentives.

Finally, a lack of transparen­cy surroundin­g these programs makes it hard for others to determine whether taxpayers got what they were promised.

So you’re probably wondering, if these incentives don’t work, why do government officials continue to use and promote them?

Incentives provide a way for politician­s to take credit for business investment. All they have to do is convince voters that these programs work and that the grand promises being made when officials cut ribbons in well-publicized ceremonies will eventually pan out.

Powerful special interest groups are also to blame, as they play a big role in shaping incentive programs and lobby vigorously for lawmakers to create them and keep them alive.

Rather than reform or rebrand these programs, states should take the advice of some of their own evaluation­s of these programs and eliminate them. Taxpayers would be better off without them.

 ?? J. Patric Schneider / Contributo­r ?? Texas has doled out billions in economic-developmen­t deals — some of them to companies, such as natural-gas processing plants, that couldn’t reasonably have been located in any other state.
J. Patric Schneider / Contributo­r Texas has doled out billions in economic-developmen­t deals — some of them to companies, such as natural-gas processing plants, that couldn’t reasonably have been located in any other state.

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