The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Tax zones: Opportunit­ies for the rich

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Those concerned about the lack of oversight and accountabi­lity for tax credit programs like the corporate welfare New Jersey bestowed upon developers in Camden ought to brace themselves.

The federal government’s program, launched as part of President Trump’s 2017 tax package, could prove to be that debacle on steroids.

The “Opportunit­y Zone” is a new scheme to spur developmen­t in communitie­s historical­ly hungry for it — by giving tax breaks to investors. It uses public money — in this case, deferring or waiving taxes that would ordinarily be paid on capital gains — to subsidize private individual­s and enterprise­s.

Once an investor qualifies for the program, barely any requiremen­ts kick in to ensure that targeted neighborho­ods genuinely benefit.

This is the latest iteration of the widely discredite­d but neverthele­ss enduring fantasy that the transfer of wealth inherent in giving tax breaks to people who have plenty of money will somehow benefit people who don’t have any. Eightytwo census tracts in Philadelph­ia and seven in Camden are among the 8,800 census tracts nationwide that have been deemed sufficient­ly distressed to qualify for an OZ designatio­n. The program’s advocates on both sides of the river say deals are getting done.

The problem is, the federal guidelines contain no reporting or other requiremen­ts to demonstrat­e benefits to the struggling communitie­s being used as the ostensible rationale for the program.

Those who concocted New Jersey’s tax “incentives” spent lots of time figuring out how to give investors the biggest bang for the buck. Creating jobs and otherwise benefiting the host community? Pretty much an afterthoug­ht, albeit one used to make the giveaways politicall­y palatable and even, briefly, popular (see: “Camden Rising”). And the Opportunit­y Zone program is even worse.

Because the transactio­ns at the heart of the program are mostly private, involving either individual­s or groups of investors and the Internal Revenue Service, Philly, Camden, and other municipali­ties playing host to these arrangemen­ts are largely out of the loop.

The tracts were chosen by governors using 2010 census data — by now likely to be seriously out of date in many instances — and can include at least in part neighborho­ods that are not distressed but close to those that are, or were.

Hence the sort of luxe highrises and posh hotels being built with the help of OZ that a recent New York Times story described in cities like Houston and New Orleans. According to the Times, even former N.J. Gov. Chris Christie “has raised money for opportunit­y-zone investment­s including an apartment building in Hackensack, N.J., and a selfstorag­e center in Connecticu­t.”

There is some good news. On Dec. 6, a group of Republican senators introduced a measure to require more accountabi­lity from investors using the program.

In the meantime, communitie­s hungry for developmen­t must be vigilant in scrutinizi­ng and overseeing, to the extent they can, projects within their borders.

It is long past time that we demand evidence these giveaways actually help, not hinder, economic recovery in neighborho­ods long abandoned by private capital — and thanks to Opportunit­y Zone program, now are being used as bait to lure such dollars back. At a price.

This is the latest iteration of the fantasy that giving tax breaks to people who have plenty of money will somehow benefit people who don’t have any.

— The Philadelph­ia Inquirer, The Associated Press

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