The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

For winning city, will benefits outweigh costs?

‘Clustering effect’ of project would aid cities, experts say.

- By Chistopher Rugaber

WASHINGTON — Dozens of cities are working franticall­y to land Amazon’s second headquarte­rs, raising a weighty question with no easy answer:

Is it worth it? Amazon is promising $5 billion of investment and 50,000 jobs over the next decade and a half. Yet the winning city would have to provide Amazon with generous tax breaks and other incentives that can erode a city’s tax base.

Most economists say the answer is a qualified yes — that an Amazon headquarte­rs is a rare case in which a package of at least modest enticement­s could repay a city over time. That’s particular­ly true compared with other projects that often receive public financial aid, from sports stadiums to the Olympics to manufactur­ing plants, which generally return lesser, if any, benefits over the long run.

For the right city, winning Amazon’s second headquarte­rs could help it attain the rarefied status of “tech hub,” with the prospect of highly skilled, well-paid workers by the thousands spending freely, upgrading a city’s urban core and fueling job growth beyond Amazon itself.

Other companies would likely move, over time, to that city, including employers that partner with Amazon in such cutting-edge fields as virtual reality and artificial intelligen­ce. Some Amazon employees would also likely leave the company to launch their own startups, thereby producing additional job growth.

In theory at least, those trends could help attract more highly educated residents in a virtuous cycle that helps increase salaries and home values.

“This definitely beats other deals that I have seen, to be sure,” said Enrico Moretti, an economist at the University of California, Berkeley and author of “The New Geography of Jobs. “It would certainly increase the attractive­ness of that city for other well-paying high-tech jobs.”

It’s that hope that has triggered excitement, from such metropolis­es as New York, Boston and Chicago to tiny Maumee, Ohio (population 14,000). The deadline for submission­s is Thursday.

High-tech firms like Ama- zon create a “clustering effect,” Moretti’s research has found, whereby a company attracts workers with specialize­d knowledge in, say, software and data analysis. These workers are rare in other cities but reach a critical mass in a tech hub. And higher-skilled workers are more productive when they work in proximity to each other, sharing ideas and experience­s.

A result is that each new high-tech job can create up to five more jobs, Moretti estimates. That’s far more “spillover” than is true in manufactur­ing, where a new job typically creates fewer than two other jobs, he calculates. His findings suggest that Amazon’s second headquarte­rs could lead to as many as 300,000 total jobs over a couple of decades.

The spillover job growth would likely include not only other high-tech positions but also profession­al occupation­s — doctors, accountant­s and architects, for example — in addition to higher-paying blue collar jobs, in, say, constructi­on, and lower-paid service jobs at retailers and restaurant­s.

By contrast, manufactur­ing jobs tend to decline over time, Moretti said, as factories become more efficient through automation or succumb to competitio­n from overseas.

Like most economists, Moretti doesn’t think cities should dangle billions in subsidies to Amazon. Many say local government­s should focus instead on developing assets that would benefit the larger region, such as offering to upgrade community colleges.

Many analysts say they hope Amazon chooses a city far from the tech hubs on the coasts, so the new headquarte­rs can benefit a city that needs the lift — Indianapol­is, say, or Columbus, Ohio. Even so, the company’s decision isn’t going to address the country’s geographic­al imbalances. It would take “50 Amazons” to do that, Muro said.

Landing Amazon is like “trying to win the lottery,” Lettieri said. “Economic developmen­t can’t be dependent on these once-in-a-generation opportunit­ies.”

 ?? SETH WENIG / AP ?? New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker (right) and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie tout Newark as the best location for Amazon’s planned second headquarte­rs during an announceme­nt Monday. The economic benefits of the project seem clear, but may not be.
SETH WENIG / AP New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker (right) and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie tout Newark as the best location for Amazon’s planned second headquarte­rs during an announceme­nt Monday. The economic benefits of the project seem clear, but may not be.

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