Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

If Josh Shapiro wants to compete with Ohio, he needs to imitate Ohio

- Elizabeth Stelle is director of policy analysis of the Commonweal­th Foundation: @ElizabethB­ryan.

Gov. Josh Shapiro is right: Pennsylvan­ia is losing to Ohio. In the last two years, Pennsylvan­ia witnessed a net loss of 2,425 residents and $90 million in income to Ohio.

To stem this flow of people and investment, his budget address proposed a pricey economic developmen­t plan, including $600 million in new subsidies and incentives to entice businesses to set up shop in Pennsylvan­ia.

Ohio indeed spends hundreds of millions on business handouts. However, Pennsylvan­ians aren’t moving to Ohio for corporate welfare. They are moving west because that’s where the jobs are.

What Ohio is doing

And the jobs are there because Ohio is doing exactly what candidate Shapiro promised: streamlini­ng regulation­s, reducing taxes, and creating more educationa­l choice.

First, Ohio is already engaged in a multiyear project to reduce state regulation­s by 30 percent. Shapiro’s budget neglects any proposal to reduce regulatory red tape or enact permitting reform. Pennsylvan­ia maintains more than 166,000 regulatory restrictio­ns, the 12th highest in the nation. Yet, research shows regulation reduction is associated with growth in state GDP and jobs.

Instead of proposing comprehens­ive regulatory reform, Shapiro launched a permit refund with several exceptions. According to the permit database, 59 permits and licenses take more than a year (assuming days are business days) to complete. And one in five permits are not available online.

In addition, he has decided to fight for the state to stay in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), which would add more economical­ly damaging regulation. RGGI would impose a carbon tax on utilities, amounting to an estimated 30% increase in electricit­y bills for Pennsylvan­ia residents and increasing business costs. Energy-intensive manufactur­ers project to lose at least 17,000 jobs.

Shapiro didn’t once reference the cap-and-tax plan during his budget address. If RGGI comes to fruition, generators expect electricit­y production to shift to other states, including West Virginia and — you guessed it — Ohio.

What Shapiro is not doing

Second, starting this year, Ohio has eliminated the annual minimum and raises the exclusion threshold at $3 million on its Commercial Activity Tax, offering some welcome tax relief to small business. The governor should recommit to lowering tax rates. In 2023, Ohio lowered personal income taxes.

On the campaign trail, Shapiro lauded his plan to accelerate the reduction of the Corporate Net Income Tax (CNIT) to 4 percent by 2025 instead of 4.99 percent by 2031. That proposal, however, was also suspicious­ly missing from this year’s budget proposal.

Pennsylvan­ia would benefit if Shapiro followed through on his CNIT promise. Lower corporate taxes are a common characteri­stic of growing states, especially those that attract large amounts of Pennsylvan­ians. North Carolina, a top destinatio­n for Pennsylvan­ians, boasts the lowest flat CNIT. All the top destinatio­n states for Pennsylvan­ians levy a lower CNIT.

Finally, Ohio passed universal school choice last year, making it an attractive destinatio­n for families with school-aged children. Shapiro could do the same here in the commonweal­th.

The governor reaffirmed his support for the Lifeline Scholarshi­p Program, also known as the Pennsylvan­ia Award for Student Success (PASS). Yet, this student-first program remains “unfinished business” and needs more than lip service. Until Shapiro uses his bully pulpit to make Lifeline Scholarshi­p/PASS a reality, there is little to no meaningful opportunit­y to succeed for the roughly 250,000 children assigned to failing Pennsylvan­ia schools.

We’re losing

Candidate Shapiro was right: Pennsylvan­ia must give businesses more certainty regarding the permitting and licensing process, enact smart tax changes, protect Pennsylvan­ians from surging energy prices, and expand scholarshi­ps for our most vulnerable students. Such policies will show the commonweal­th is “open for business” and stem decades of out-migration.

Otherwise, Shapiro better get used to, in his words, “losing to friggin’ Ohio.”

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