The Denver Post

Amazon’s HQ2 dilemma: Lower taxes or liberal voters

- By Michael Sasso and Margaret Newkirk

ATLANTA» The competitio­n for Amazon.com Inc.’s second headquarte­rs could come down to which city can offer a red-state business climate with blue-state culture. Or, at least a culture that won’t have Amazon’s workers seeing red.

A problem vexing chamber of commerce folks in Southern corporate hubs like Dallas, Atlanta and Raleigh, N.C., is that, while the cities offer attractive business climates, they’re also located in conservati­veleaning states. Some companies boycotted North Carolina over its since-repealed “bathroom bill,” and more recently some Georgia politician­s stripped Delta Air Lines Inc. of a tax break for severing a discount program with the NRA. Finding the right business and cultural fit could vex Amazon as well.

Tech company executives overwhelmi­ngly lean left on social issues and favor lenient immigratio­n and gay-rights policies, while also abhorring business regulation and labor unions, according to a study by Stanford University political economy professor Neil Malhotra and some colleagues. Amazon recently paused constructi­on on a tower in its hometown Seattle after the city proposed a new tax to ease homelessne­ss.

“Why are these tech executives so liberal? Why do they support the Democratic Party, when they disagree with issues on labor market protection?” Malhotra said. “I would say, on a lot of other issues they can’t imagine voting for the Republican Party.”

Some left-leaning cities on Amazon’s HQ2 list fare much worse in terms of taxes. New York has the seventh-highest “effective business tax rate” in the U.S. at 5.8 percent, according to a 2017 Ernst & Young LLP study that measures taxes against the size of a state’s economy. The national average for states is 4.5 percent. North Carolina had the fourth-lowest tax rate in E&Y’s study at 3.6 percent based on 2016 data, but sits in a state dominated by conservati­ves, according to a 2017 Gallup survey of political ideology. (North Carolina has since lowered its tax rate even more).

HQ2 contender Toronto doesn’t get a mention in the study as a Canadian city, but is considered a relatively liberal city with a diverse and highly educated workforce, though it lost its corporate tax advantage to the U.S. in the wake of Trump tax cuts. And the province of Ontario has the highest taxes in Canada, according to Charles Lammam, director of fisal studies at Canada’s Fraser Institute.

Malhotra sees Northern Virginia as the strongest region in the Amazon sweepstake­s with more liberals moving into the region and a favorable business climate.

Ranking HQ2 contenders by political leanings is tricky, because corporatio­ns looking for progressiv­e culture can find it in big cities even situated in deeply conservati­ve states, said Megan Randall, a researcher at the Urban Institute in Washington. Political and tax climates, she believes, won’t factor as heavily into Amazon’s decision as each city’s educated workforce and robust infrastruc­ture, including numerous flight connection­s.

Social issues like the transgende­r bathroom bill “may come into play if a company feels like from a social perspectiv­e, it is not representi­ng its own values,” Randall said. “Certainly that’s a thing, but it’s hard to figure out how much of a game changer those things really are.”

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