Amazon competition just a waste of time
New York, Virginia didn’t have to promise billions
New York and Virginia have given Amazon somewhere between $2 billion and $3 billion in tax breaks to convince it to do what it was probably already going to — open its two new headquarters in their states.
But as easy as it is to point out howwasteful this is — literally anything would be a better use of this money, but especially if it went toward needed investments in schools and infrastructure— it’s hard to get governments to stop handing out these kind of goodies.
Part of it is a simple matter of misaligned incentives: politicians get to bask in the glow of positive headlines about all the jobs they’re supposedly bringing to their communities, but aren’t around for the negative consequences when things end up costing more and delivering less thanwas promised.
There’s more to it than just that, though.
The same reason that it doesn’t make any sense for NewYork to subsidize Amazon — agglomeration — is also why politicians might feel pressured to do so nonetheless.
Which is to say that America’s cities are stuck in a prisoner’s dilemma where no matter howobvious it seems that they not engage in corporate welfare, they still do, because even losing once raises the specter of losing over and over again.
Amazon’s chief executive, Jeff Bezos, owns The Washington Post.
The important thing to understand here is that, at least within the United States, taxes don’thave a lot to do with where companies set up shop.
If they did, Silicon Valley would be in Texas instead of California. Or, more to the point, Amazon’s second headquarters would be in Atlanta instead of northern Virginia.
Georgia put together a much more generous incentive package that not only included $2 billion in direct subsidies, but also, as ifwe needed further confirmation that we live in a post-parody age, the kind of private subway car just for Amazon employees that The Onion had joked about cities desperately offering.
So what does matter, then? Simple: workers, workers, workers.
Or, as former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer memorably put it: developers, developers, developers.
Now, being near a toptier research university can help create a pipeline of future employees, but what’s even more important are the companies that are already in a place. Having a lot of other tech companies around means that there’s a big pool of tech workers for Amazon to hire fromdown the line.
Which it freely admitted was its biggest consideration.
“Economic incentives were one factor in our decision,” Amazon wrote on its blog, “but attracting top talent was the leading driver.”
There are bigger benefits, in other words, to clustering around companies like your own than there are to just getting a tax write-off. And it’s not just about hiring, either.
It’s also about the kind of cross-pollination of ideas that happens when you’re around like-minded companies.
You’re quicker to adopt new and better ways of doing things, and to come up with even newer and even better ways yourselves.
Which is why New York andVirginia shouldn’t have had to use the lure of tax breaks to get Amazon to come.
These places, after all, already have pretty big tech footprints, are geographically close to other important industries, and have the infrastructure in place to handle lots of new workers.