Las Vegas Review-Journal

Seattle punishes companies again

Levies a new tax on large businesses with well-paid workers

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SEATTLE is doing a great job of showing the country how not to help businesses recover from the coronaviru­s epidemic. On Monday, the Seattle City Council voted to impose a new tax on companies with payrolls of $7 million or more. The new levy is a 0.7 percent to 2.4 percent payroll tax on employees making over $150,000 a year. The highest tax rate will apply to employees making over $400,000 at companies with payrolls over $1 billion. That category includes Amazon. The scheme is estimated to generate over $200 million annually.

The plan comes two years after the Seattle City Council unanimousl­y passed a head tax aimed at companies like Amazon and Starbucks. That plan would have raised around $47 million by imposing a $275 fee on businesses for each full-time worker. After Amazon and other companies began work on a referendum, the City Council reversed course and repealed the tax.

Now, the far-left council has passed a tax that’s four times bigger in the midst of an unpreceden­ted global pandemic. For good measure, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan allowed rioters to take over parts of the city last month, forming the so-called Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone. She order police to clear the area after a teenager was fatally shot. That wasn’t the only shooting. There was also an allegation of sexual assault. Earlier this week, a band of looters roamed the streets, breaking windows, stealing merchandis­e and starting fires.

Businesses should be receiving a refund from Seattle’s inept and feckless political leaders. Instead, they’re being penalized for paying their employees well.

It’s worth noting the disconnect in progressiv­es’ reasoning. In 2014, Seattle passed a law raising the minimum wage to $15 by next year. The government must raise the minimum wage, the logic goes, to force greedy companies to pay their employees a “living” wage. Just a few years later, the same people are demanding that government punish businesses for the crime of paying some of their employees well.

If this was about logic, the contradict­ion would be clear. Wages aren’t a function of a business’s greed or charity. They’re a reflection of the economic worth an employee brings to a company.

Amazon, at least, has taken the hint. In June, it announced it would lease 111,000 square feet of office space in Redmond, which is 15 miles away. It’s also building a 43-story tower in nearby Bellevue.

All Seattle has done is make it more expensive to employ high-skill workers. That’s an odd economic developmen­t strategy.

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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