Corporate Virtue and Corporate Subsidies
By Phil Mattera, Dirt Diggers Digest
For a speech that was supposed to focus on the plight of
low-wage workers, President Obama’s State of the Union contained a surprising
number of favorable references to specific large corporations. I counted seven
plugs — for Apple, Costco, Ford, Google, Microsoft, Sprint and Verizon. The
Ford mention, which alluded to “the best-selling truck in America,” sounded
like a high-level product placement.
Most of these companies were cited for their supposed acts of
corporate virtue, such as the role of the telecoms in helping to bring
high-speed broadband to schools. There’s something else these firms have in
common: they’ve all been recipients of substantial economic development
subsidies from state and local governments.
We find that in every one of the states the corporate giveaways
far outweigh the current costs of providing pensions to state workers. In the
case of Louisiana, for example, the giveaways are more than five times the
retirement costs.
State legislators and governors have a tendency these days to
get frantic about pension costs. Our research suggest that they should be more
concerned about the larger revenue losses stemming from what are often
ineffective “incentives” given to business.
The other report, Show Us the Subsidized Jobs, is the latest
in our series of surveys on the performance of state governments in disclosing
online which companies are getting financial assistance and what they are doing
with it, especially in relation to job creation. There are two main messages
that emerge from the study.
First is the fact that there is now at least some online
recipient disclosure in all but a handful of states. The number has doubled since
we did the first of these surveys in 2007. That’s the good news.
The other message is not so encouraging: There are vast
discrepancies in the depth and the quality of the disclosure. Some states such
as Michigan and North Carolina provide reasonably good disclosure for all their
major programs, while others such as Nevada and South Carolina provide
bare-bones disclosure — meaning company names only — for only one key program.
In many cases no information is reported on the number of jobs subsidized companies
are creating or the wages being paid.
To enable detailed comparisons of programs, we rate them on a
scale of 0 to 100. Points are given for providing details on subsidy amounts,
on job and wage outcomes, and on the inclusion of key information about subsidized
projects and companies. We also rate programs on how easy it is to find and use
the data.
Based on this system, the states with the best average scores
for their key programs are Illinois, Michigan and North Carolina. Being best in
relative terms does not mean that the absolute scores are very impressive.
Top-ranking Illinois has an average of only 65 and Michigan comes in at 58.
Every other state has an average below 50 percent. The average program score is
only 21 (or 39 if you leave out those with no disclosure at all). Only seven
programs score 75 or above.
These scores are so low mainly because so many programs fail to
provide good reporting on outcomes, which account for a large portion of the
points in our scoring system. Fewer than half of the 246 programs we examine
include any reporting on jobs or wages in subsidized companies. And many of
those that do provide only projections rather than the actual amounts. Less
than one-tenth of the programs provide actual amounts for both jobs and wages.
In the report we emphasize that transparency does not equal
effectiveness or complete accountability. A program can disclose all the
essential details but still be a waste of taxpayer money. Transparency is what
allows the public to determine when that is the case.
Our interest in disclosure is not only for abstract reasons of
accountability. If states put more information online, there were will more for
us to capture for our Subsidy
Tracker database, a
national search engine covering more than 500 programs.
Next month we will introduce Subsidy Tracker 2.0. Along with the
raw data, we will add information on the parent company of the recipient firms.
This will make it possible to see at a glance how much large companies such as
the seven cited above have received across the country. The Dirt Diggers Digest
will provide wall-to-wall coverage.