The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Phil promises STEM growth, Kim looks to tax breaks

- By Michael Catalini

TRENTON » Democrat Phil Murphy and Republican Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno want voters to put them in charge of the state’s economy and are charting different courses toward what they promise will be growth.

Murphy is promising to spur the creation of science and technology jobs, wants to implement a public bank, hike the minimum wage and gain credit-agency trust by “fully funding” the public pension.

Guadagno has homed in on property tax reduction, but is also saying she will follow through with Chris Christie’s $5 billion in promised tax credits to lure Amazon’s new headquarte­rs to New Jersey.

A closer look at one of the top issues in the race to succeed Christie, a Republican, who is term-limited.

THE ISSUE

Creating new jobs and building the economy are as much a part of this year’s campaign for governor as glossy posters and hand-shaking along a rope line.

It’s a perennial issue, and voters tell pollsters it’s on the top of their minds in 2017 as well.

New Jersey’s economy has seen struggled under the Christie administra­tion — in part stemming from the Great Recession — but it has also seen growth.

Christie and Guadagno came into office with an unemployme­nt rate just shy of 10 percent and with job losses ticking up monthly. The jobless rate has plummeted to 4.5 percent this August, so much so that Christie had taken to touring the state again to tout the falling rate. Those tours have ebbed in recent months as the rate climbed from 4.2 percent back up to 4.5 percent.

The state’s recovery has also lagged, adding on average about 45,000 jobs annually from 2010-2016, according to a Rutgers study. The study found that to keep pace with the rest of the country’s recovery, the state should average about 72,000 jobs per year.

IN THEIR OWN WORDS

Murphy rhetoric on jobs, putting the rebuilding of what he calls the STEM — science, technology, engineerin­g and math — economy is front and center. A staple line in his stump speech is that New Jersey was “Silicon Valley before there was Silicon Valley.” He says he wants to return the state to that status.

He’s called for strengthen­ing vocational and community college education as a way to attract those jobs. A key part of his platform is a $15 minimum wage, which he said in Tuesday’s debate for the first time that he would favor phasing it in. He’s also called for more investment

in infrastruc­ture and transporta­tion projects.

He has also called for the creation of a public bank, which he says would stop the flow interest to banks that hold the state’s cash and instead return a dividend to taxpayers. Murphy has also promised more jobs from the expansion of environmen­tally friendly sectors, like wind and solar.

Murphy also indicates he’d rebuild credit agencies’ trust in the state by fully funding the pension.

Guadagno, who was charged with cutting regulation­s and luring businesses to the states, has taken credit for the state’s recovery, touting the addition of nearly 300,000 private sector jobs.

But her campaign is almost singularly focused on reducing property taxes, which are the country’s highest She is calling for the state to attract more military jobs.

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