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The Great American Job Scam

By Lakshmi Chaudhry, AlterNet. Posted July 27, 2005.


Corporations get huge tax breaks from local and state governments, even when they rarely deliver the jobs and tax revenues that they promise.
The Great American Job Scam
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We increasingly live in a Wal-Mart America, where the hours are long, wages low, and benefits non-existent. Where have all the good jobs gone? The debate over jobs has for the most part been obscured by partisan rhetoric, corporate spin and media hype. Screaming headlines about outsourcing jostle those of corporate fraud. But in the end we're none the wiser about how to create a better future for ourselves and our children.

Greg LeRoy's new book, "The Great American Job Scam: Corporate Tax Dodging and the Myth of Job Creation," offers at least part of the answer in exposing a system that subsidizes corporate greed at the expense of the taxpayer. Today, states, counties, and cities cannibalize their own communities in the name of "attracting business," which entails competing with one another to waste vast amounts of precious taxpayer dollars in the form of corporate subsidies. As LeRoy demonstrates in his book, these subsidies are not just "unfair" but also entirely useless. Companies routinely pocket the money -- all $50 billion of it each year -- without delivering either the promised jobs or tax revenues.

LeRoy spoke to AlterNet from his office in Washington DC.

Lakshmi: So what is the "great American job scam"?

Greg LeRoy: It's an intentionally rigged system that enables companies to get huge tax breaks and other taxpayer subsidies by promising good jobs and higher tax revenues -- and then allowing them to fail to deliver and suffer no meaningful consequences.

And this is a system that costs the American tax payers $50 billion a year?

Right, that's the estimated total spending by states and cities.

One of the points you make in the book is that it is very hard to get this data, right? There is no disclosure, with these corporate deals being negotiated behind closed doors. So the very heart of your argument -- that corporations don't deliver on the increased tax revenues, increased jobs, etc that they promise in return for these tax breaks -- is obscured by this lack of disclosure.

People who develop these estimates at the state level are dealing with broad aggregate numbers. It would tell you nothing about any specific company, whether it did or did not create jobs, did or did not generate tax revenue. In most states, we are completely in the dark.

Having said that, 12 states now have some form of annual company-specific disclosure. We're very excited because just recently Illinois, just began reporting data. There are four states now that disclose some of their data on the web and we think Illinois is the best.

Whose interest does this secrecy serve? It obviously serves the interest of the corporations, but it's surprising that state governments have not pushed for more disclosure.

It obviously serves lots of peoples' self-interest to hide what's going on: the companies who get the big tax breaks and don't want people to look carefully at the outcomes; the politicians who often frankly know this is bad public policy and don't want to own up to it. Often the effects of these tax breaks play out over many years. So you have one governor hand off budget potholes to the next governor and so on. So there's lots of buck-passing going on. There's lots of self-interest in these things being hidden.

One of the most striking things in your book is this ridiculously lopsided power relationship between public officials and corporations. The politicians are almost like members of a harem vying for the king's attention, or in this case, a company's favor.

A lot of the scams that you describe -- as in extorting these huge subsidies without delivering any kind of return -- comes from the fact that different states are competing with each other to land a corporate deal. Have we always had this war among the states, almost a kind of mutual and assured destruction?

That's really the nub issue. It's the power dynamic both among states and companies and among suburbs and companies -- because this harem/king dynamic, as you put it, plays out at the regional level as well as at the multi-state level.

No, it was not always like this, and I tried to sketch the major kind of milestones along the way where I think the dams really broke. There's the birth of a site location consulting industry we got with Fantus, and its growth in the '50s and '60s is part of the story. The secretive consulting industry hides in the shadows and specializes in playing states and cities against each other on behalf of the companies it represents. By the '70s, we had done this thousands of times.


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Lakshmi Chaudhry is the former senior editor of AlterNet.

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View:
The Corpies have always got a break
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Jul 27, 2005 9:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the Republican Party was born they warned of a threat to Americans that had the ability to become a worse oppressor than the Crown we'd recently won independance from. The threat was wealthy Americans pooling together their monies to form Corporations. These entities were trying to subvert the Constitution,setting themselves above the people and the government.In the 1870's we passed laws,these new entities WEREsubservient to the Constitution.Well things have changed alot in the last 135 years. Because they control the government, they get "Corporate Welfare' to stay in Biznuss'. In the 90's it amounted to .75/day/citizen all year.Now it's nearer $1.35. Welfare cost .25/day/citizen,and we did'nt have a 40% underclass The Corpies have squelched the Constitution,ransacked the Gov,and construed the tax laws so that every expense incurred by 'Biznuss' is a tax write off.
The Corpies will say that's not true,but, there are plenty of us that have Business Degrees under us that know how tilted the laws really are.If from my yard I pumped out the poison that the Corpies get to force on us,I'd be the biggest Mass Murdering,Bio-Cidal Maniac in the history of the World.But with a few friends and an Inc. in our name we'd be icons of Capitalism,able to poison every living thing,making money for ourselves and collecting 'affiliation' duesfrom the wannabe club members,the Politicians. We the People have to demand from the GOV,under threat of instant removal, every taxbreak,loophole and 2.5% tax rate given to the Corpies. Demand from the Corpies that the make their operations environmentally harmless,to workers and their surrounding areas, start paying 'REAL LIVING' wages.make the workplaces safer with more 'Parental Leaves' to keep families strong. Then when both say no, National Strike!
Quit working,paying taxes,buying newspapers,watching T.V.
Lay down your guns,take off the uniforms,burn the company flag.You'll get your life back.the Corpies will get a major wake-up call.The Political Prostitutes the Corpies own will be out because 'Dem ho's don't work no mo'. The time has come
for the rightful leaders to Lead. We The People can truly
do things right,give all the breaks to the people, few to the wealthy,none to the Corpies.How much do you want to give to the folks that have killed Great-Grt Granpparents,Great
Grandparents,Grandparents,immeadiate Family and Great grandchildren's Greatgrandchildren?

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» Take away their 'personhood' Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: Take away their 'personhood' Posted by: canuckistani
» RE: The Corpies have always got a break Posted by: dennyduke@earthlink.net
The Big Lie
Posted by: asque on Jul 27, 2005 9:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
During a period that was supposed to be the biggest boom economy in history, local goverments saw thier income dropping to the point that they were having trouble maintaining the infrastructure built in the '50's. It is little wonder that local goverments, seemingly unable to compete in what really matters, started trying to "buy" some of that prosperity. I truly beleave that economists of the future will realize that the transfer of money and power to the corperations was a disaster for the economy and that the fact that local economies were struggeling nationwide was a sure sign of trouble ahead.

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» It's all about jobs Posted by: Sojourner
Corporate Welfare
Posted by: trutex on Jul 27, 2005 10:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
a tax shift in which corporations are given a break, while the working/middle class sales taxes increase have become the NORM on job regeneration. Schools and health care are sacrificed for corporate political donors can make a profitable return on their contributions. Our future is determined by "benevolent" corporate big shots who allow a little bit to "trickle down". Today, that philosophy is now applied to medical care. THE PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT has always stood against such Centralized power that cares for no one but the moneyed class.

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On the right track
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jul 27, 2005 12:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In this time when there are so many things going wrong in America, from global warming, the energy crisis, corporate welfare, destruction of the middle class, to downsizing and outsourcing of jobs, to name a few, it would pay us well to find the root cause. To me it is obvious that all of these ills are caused by corporations having too much power. As our founding fathers wisely ruled the separation of church and state, lest a powerful church would oppress us, we should now demand a separation of state and every special interest organization. The American government of Lincoln, that is, "Government of the people, by the people, and for the people", has become "Government of the people, by the politicians, and for the campaign contributors".
http:www.lincolninitiative.org
Though, we the people have the clout,
To vote the politicians out,
We'll still be ruled by sleazy "smarties",
Who paid money to both parties,
Now here's the truth without a doubt,
We can't vote those rascals out.

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The Company Store
Posted by: bornxeyed on Jul 27, 2005 1:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The "Company Store" used to supply mineworkers who formed towns near the mine with everything they needed. Most times a miner would run up more in debt to the "Company Store" then he made in wages. He'd "sold his soul to the company store".

Such a condition amounts to involuntary servitude.

It seems in the latter half if the 20th century to the present the country has become one big "Company Store", supplying us with all the necessities of life in neat little single or family serving pre-cooked packages and one gallon jugs of "purified" water..

Without a break from the corporate food and water trough we've all sold a bit of our soul to the company store.

That is, given up a freedom to physically survive without them.

If you want to break the corporate monopoly on government, institutions and wealth you need to first break their monopoly on food and water.

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the real problem...
Posted by: SteveBreeze on Jul 27, 2005 7:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not haveing read the book,,,,yet,,, it sounds interesting. However, like most raids on the taxpayers dollars, have a return trail to the politicians.
Campaign contributions are not bribes used to change the mind of a politicians. Campaign contributions are given to politicians who already agree with the tax break the corporations seek.
If we the people want to end our being ripped off we need to have the politicians fully on our payroll, meaning public financing of campaign. The Clean Money Campaign system promoted by Public Citizen is the most workable soultion I know of.

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me and my imaginary friend inc.
Posted by: jaggurnaut on Jul 27, 2005 8:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
lets all start me and my imaginary friend inc.

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adp3d
Posted by: adp3d on Jul 27, 2005 9:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's absolutely disgusting watching these different mincipalities(sp?) whoring themselves for these businesses. Here in Lansing, Mi General Motors closed a plant just within five years after being granted major abatements and consessions

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Who are we kidding here? Corporations pay no taxes.
Posted by: FlapJackSeven on Jul 30, 2005 2:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Corporations pay no taxes. Corporations and all business entities simply add the taxes on to the costs of doing business, so you, John Q. Public, eventually pay all taxes foisted on corporations. That's why many Americans feel that corporations should pay no taxes at all. It's an illusion. It makes people who don't know any better feel good that someone is sharing the tax load. The public sector pays all taxes. That's why taxes should be cut, and immediately.

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