The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Malloy’s trickle-up prosperity doesn’t work

- Don Pesci Columnist Don Pesci is a writer who lives in Vernon. Email him at donpesci@att.net.

“First Five” agreements between Gov. Dannel Malloy and preferred companies such as Alexion Pharmaceut­icals Inc., thought to be a “major player in Connecticu­t’s fledgling bioscience industry,” are non-enforced whenever Mr. Malloy chooses not to enforce paper tiger contracts.

About a year ago, Alexion moved from Cheshire into its new headquarte­rs in New Haven, the 23-mile move having been facilitate­d by the usual “First Five” contractua­l agreement. The package delivered to Alexion’s doorstep by a grateful governor included a $6 million grant, a subsidized $20 million loan transforme­d into a gift provided Alexion had 650 workers in Connecticu­t by 2017, and tax credits worth in the neighborho­od of $25 million.

Handouts of this kind to multi-million dollar companies, little more than polite bribes, are politicall­y useful. The message behind the tax buck is this: “In heavily taxed, heavily regulated Connecticu­t, we cannot reduce taxes across the board for all companies, but for you, my pet, we will work out a tax dispensati­on, in return for which we expect nothing – wink, wink — in the way of campaign donations.

We do, however, expect you to join us in a necessary piece of political kabuki. Our mutually beneficial win-win arrangemen­t will give us boasting rights, while you will get some tax money for producing jobs you might have produced anyway, even without our generous interventi­ons. Please remember us in your will.”

It seems pretty clear at this point that the tax money Mr. Malloy showered upon Alexion did not purchase jobs – because Alexion recently announced that it was cutting 200 jobs, about 7 percent of its global workforce. Alexion has not disclosed the number of jobs in Connecticu­t that will be lost because, according to CEO David Brennan, “In preparing our 2017 operating plan, the submitted expenses, including headcount requests, across functions were outpacing our anticipate­d revenue growth.”

The announceme­nt presents Mr. Malloy with a knotty political problem: What do you do with a favored company that regards contractua­l arrangemen­ts as little more than whispered promises? The answer to this question is: You don’t do anything. You CAN’T do anything. You simply write off the loss the way greedy billionair­es pilloried by stalwart progressiv­e such as Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts write off losses against their tax obligation­s. You can’t do anything – because if you were to set loose Attorney General George Jepsen on Alexion, the ensuing publicity regarding a failed “First Five” client would remove a powerful knight from your campaign chessboard; the politicall­y profitable illusion that a highly taxed, overregula­ted state is capable of creating more jobs than a low tax, low regulatory state would simply explode like a pricked balloon. Life will go on. Politics, it turns out, is not the art of the possible; it is the art of survival. Perhaps no one will notice.

A legislator with spine did notice. House Republican Leader Themis Klarides pointed to Alexion as “just another example of how the administra­tion is doing deals to benefit companies without any real guarantees of longterm job creation and commitment from the beneficiar­ies of such lucrative contracts.”

While the executive branch “has to have the authority to engage in such transactio­ns, and the goal is obviously to keep and attract employers to Connecticu­t,’’ Klarides pointed out, “… the legislativ­e branch should be heard on these matters.” The legislativ­e branch is constituti­onally charged with collecting and allocating tax revenue, in addition to balancing budgets.

Replying through spokespers­on Meg Green, Malloy retorted, “This is precisely what’s wrong with Republican leadership – it’s easier to play politics and root for failure than to understand the facts.

To date, the First Five initiative has created over 3,500 jobs in Connecticu­t. As a First Five company, Alexion Pharmaceut­icals has made a commitment to stay and grow right here in Connecticu­t – that is not changing. While some may call for pulling the rug out from under our major employers in an attempt to score political points, we will continue to focus on strengthen­ing our economy by providing greater stability and predictabi­lity for businesses throughout the state.”

Imagine – a legislator concerned with recouping a modicum of control over the distributi­on of tax monies to companies that care little for government­al “investment­s” as against stockholde­r investment­s. In fact, Malloy is not – and never could be – as capable an investor as the stock market mavens that regularly bet other people’s money on promising companies. But what our state government, led by progressiv­es, will not do to improve business prospects in Connecticu­t – i.e. create a stable business climate through tax cuts, deregulati­on and sound fiscal policies – other states will do, precisely to insure “stability and predictabi­lity for businesses.”

The First Five interventi­ons preferred by Malloy distort markets, create uncertaint­y and contribute to an unhealthy accretion of power in the executive at the expense of a sometimes spineless legislatur­e.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? The Alexion building is in New Haven.
FILE PHOTO The Alexion building is in New Haven.
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