The Day

Lamont tells a Connecticu­t ‘turnaround’ story to Wall Street

- By MARK PAZNIOKAS

Gov. Ned Lamont and his top economic and budget officials worked Thursday to change the Wall Street Journal’s dim view of Connecticu­t as a place to do business, urging the Journal’s editorial writers and, separately, viewers on MSNBC and CNBC to see the state as firmly on the path to a fiscal turnaround.

Lamont began his day in New York at MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” and ended it on CNBC’s “Closing Bell.” In between, the governor visited the Journal, which recently skewered Connecticu­t’s tax policies and business climate, and attended a foreign policy address by his choice for president, Joe Biden.

He briefly visited Biden backstage after the speech, and called him “a good man” on “Morning Joe.” The Biden stop was a late addition to a day devoted to polishing Connecticu­t’s image for people influentia­l with business, especially the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal.

At the Journal, his staff said, the governor talked about being a businessma­n who held the line on income-tax rates in his first budget and has vowed to minimize the use of giveaways to spur economic growth.

“I think the governor struck the right tone,” said David Lehman, the former Goldman Sachs partner who advises Lamont on economics and serves as his commission­er of economic and community developmen­t. “It was a really important day.”

Lehman and Melissa McCaw, who oversees the state budget as secretary of policy and management, joined Lamont for a private meeting at the Wall Street Journal, helping to rebut an editorial that criticized the state for tax increases on everyone and generous economic-developmen­t packages for a lucky few.

“Thus we have Connecticu­t’s business model: Raise costs for everyone and then leverage taxpayers to provide discounts for a politicall­y favored few. A business that operated like this would lose customers and eventually go bankrupt,” the Journal wrote. “That may be where Connecticu­t is headed.”

The editorial noted that the state gave away more money in corporate incentives in 2016 than it brought in through a corporate tax increase imposed the previous year.

Maribel La Luz, who is leaving the governor’s office as communicat­ions director to become the senior advisor to Lehman on external affairs, said Lamont, Lehman and McCaw spent more than an hour talking about what has changed since Lamont took office in January.

It builds on a letter from Lamont that the Journal published on June 24, two days after the editorial. He called himself “a small-business Democrat, someone who knows what it means to balance a budget at the end of the month.”

“I wasn’t going to sign a budget that increased income-tax rates for anyone in the state. I announced a self-imposed Debt Diet that reduced authorizat­ions to Connecticu­t’s decades-old addiction to bonding by 40%. I kept spending increases in line with inflation the first year of the budget, with a modest increase in the second year. And I maintained a rainy-day fund in excess of $2 billion—the largest in the state’s history.”

Connecticu­t still faces significan­t financial challenges, including one of the nation’s largest unfunded pension obligation­s, the result of generous benefits and decades of underfundi­ng. Retirement benefits have been cut significan­tly for new employees, but there is no quick fix for the unfunded liability.

The Lamont administra­tion is making the case the state is now moving in the right direction, seizing on a metric it hopes plays well on Wall Street — bond ratings.

The timing of the visit was propitious. The previous day, the bond-rating agency, Kroll, improved its outlook on Connecticu­t from negative to stable. Four months ago, Standard & Poor’s raised its outlook from stable to positive.

On CNBC, Lamont’s introducti­on by Sara Eisen included a mention that Connecticu­t was 35th in CNBC’s latest rankings of the best states for business.

“It’s a turnaround,” Lamont said. “We’re making progress.”

Eisen said the state gets high grades for education and quality of life, but a lot of Ds on other measures, including the economy and cost of doing business.

“You’re a tough grader,” Lamont said, then noted the state had actually crept up from 37th to 35th.

“Here’s what we had to do,” Lamont said. “We had to get an honestly balanced budget done on time without raising taxes. We did that. That hasn’t happened in a long time in the state. Secondly, what we got to do is invest in infrastruc­ture.”

While he spoke, several graphics flashed on screen, not all compliment­ary. One showed four prominent businessme­n who have left Connecticu­t.

In a telephone interview on his trip back to Connecticu­t, Lehman said he thought the day went well, especially the visit to the Journal.

“They had a negative predisposi­tion toward us in the past. I think it’s really important we change that and address it head on,” he said. “I hope this day was the first many in that effort.”

Lamont has not completely sworn off financial incentives to business, but he vows to minimize them. Lehman said they cannot be completely eliminated, as they are now baked into economic developmen­t.

“We’ve been consistent, and I hope clear, that while it is part of the dialogue, it’s not something we’re going to lead with,” he said. “I told the Journal, the free markets, I’m a believer in that, but ultimately incentives are part of the dialogue with businesses these days.”

Mark Pazniokas is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www. ctmirror.org). Copyright 2019 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. mpazniokas@ctmirror.org

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