Las Vegas Review-Journal

Free money

Job creation and state subsidies

- Theresa Krause Boulder City

Las Vegas recently came up short in the Amazon sweepstake­s, failing to make the cut as a possible location for the retail giant’s second headquarte­rs. The project has led scores of locales to open the taxpayer checkbook in an effort to lure the company and an estimated 50,000 jobs, along with the concurrent capital investment.

But the race to land Amazon also triggered a debate about the wisdom of showering tax dollars on corporatio­ns or entreprene­urs under the guise of economic developmen­t. And another recent study on the subject is again calling into question the efficiency of such methods.

In January, Amazon trimmed the more than 230 proposals down to 20, leaving Southern Nevada out of the mix. State and local developmen­t officials have refused to release the full details of their 113-page incentive package, but this month they finally allowed local taxpayers to examine a portion of what was promised on their behalf.

The Review-journal’s Wade Tyler Millward obtained nine unredacted pages of the proposal and found that the giveaways included about 84 acres comprising Cashman Field and adjacent areas. The documents did not mention the hundreds of millions in tax abatements that state and local economic officials no doubt also waved in front of Amazon.

Mr. Millward reported that the Governor’s Office of Economic Developmen­t spent $31,250 on “research, management services and video promotion” in relation to the bid.

You can’t expect those in the private sector to turn down free money if politician­s put it on the table. But the Chicago Tribune reported this month that a review by the Economic Policy Institute, a D.c.-based think tank, concludes that economic developmen­t officials should more carefully weigh the costs and benefits of such incentive packages.

The institute looked at a handful of “fulfillmen­t centers” that Amazon had built in Illinois in recent years in return for millions of dollars in subsidies. They concluded that “there’s little evidence the e-commerce giant’s (projects) contribute to overall job growth in the counties where they open,” the Tribune reported.

In addition, “researcher­s also did not see signs Amazon fulfillmen­t centers boosted average wages for warehouse workers in the surroundin­g county,” the paper noted.

“Our first step for local economic developmen­t can’t be giving out millions to national employers,” an economic analyst at the institute told the Tribune.

A project the scope of Amazon’s second headquarte­rs can make political careers, which is one reason that states and cities fall all over themselves to put together their lavish corporate gift baskets — witness Nevada and Tesla’s $1.5 billion deal. Some of these endeavors may indeed generate the economic activity promised.

Ultimately, though, simply creating a welcoming climate for businesses — through lower taxes and a reasonable regulatory environmen­t — remains the fairest, most cost-effective and productive approach to economic growth and job creation.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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Fax 702-383-4676 so hard to undermine and stop the Mueller investigat­ion?

If it is proven to be a witch hunt, as he claims, he then could gloat and tweet to all the world, “See. I told you there was nothing there!”

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