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GE, Massachusetts, and the Corruption of Crony Capitalism
Townhall.com ^ | January 20, 2016 | Jeff Jacoby

Posted on 01/20/2016 8:12:39 AM PST by Kaslin

As General Electric gears up to move its headquarters from Fairfield, Conn., to Boston, the people and communities being left behind are dreading the pain to come.

John Engel, a real estate agent and town councilor in nearby New Canaan, told public radio's "Marketplace" that the departure of 800 GE executives, most of whom will likely list their homes for sale, will send the local housing market staggering. Once the region loses millions of dollars in disposable income, it will ineluctably lose much of the business those dollars sustained. There will be fewer patrons to fill local restaurants, for example, and thus fewer jobs for restaurant employees. Some (most?) of the $14 billion that GE has annually spent buying goods and services from Connecticut vendors will migrate northward. Ditto the $10 million GE has spent per year on charitable contributions, and the estimated 49,000 hours its employees have given in volunteer work.

The impending exodus of GE after more than 40 years is a blow from which many local companies, and the families that depend on them, may be reeling for years. Tony Hwang, a state senator from Fairfield County, doesn't exaggerate when he describes GE's forthcoming move as "a punch in the stomach for the state of Connecticut."

Have you ever paid someone to punch a victim in the stomach? If you're a Massachusetts taxpayer, you have now.

To induce GE to relocate to Boston, Governor Charlie Baker and Mayor Marty Walsh offered to cross the corporate behemoth's palm with silver — lots and lots of silver. The package of incentives underwritten by Bay State taxpayers is expected eventually to total more than $150 million in direct subsidies, tax abatements, training funds, site improvements, and property acquisition costs. That means that General Electric — a conglomerate with roughly $150 billion in annual revenues — will siphon $188,000 out of the public treasury for each job it proposes to move to Boston.

"We won Powerball today," the mayor exulted to reporters when the news broke last week. That might be true in some alternate universe where Powerball winners fork over a jackpot rather than collect one. In our universe, however, when government spends huge honking sums of taxpayer dollars on corporate welfare, it hasn't won a thing. It has wagered public money for the benefit of a private company, in the process penalizing other companies by forcing them to subsidize their competitors. The politicians covet the power and glory that come with making those wagers. But their track record is terrible, and labeling their reckless gambles "investments" changes nothing.

"This will be a good investment for Massachusetts and . . . Boston," says Baker, rationalizing the offer of a fortune in public funds to influence a corporation's private business decision. "The tools that we'll be using are the same tools that have been in place for a very long time and have been used by prior administrations."

No kidding. Prior administrations played the same game, placing losing bets on Organogenesis and Vertex Pharmaceuticals, on Evergreen Solarand Intel Corp., on Nortel Networks and Fidelity Investments. Again and again, Beacon Hill doles out subsidies, tax breaks, and other bribes to lure out-of-state companies to Massachusetts or persuade in-state firms not to leave. Again and again, the giveaways fail to produce the intended results. Again and again, politicians swear they've learned their lesson. Then along comes another company, promising the moon in exchange for "incentives," and the taxpayers get ripped off once more.

Coaxing GE to Massachusetts via pricey perks and favoritism isn't legitimate economic development. It's a corrupting shell game. It compels Bay State taxpayers to enrich a vast multinational, while knowingly inflicting pain on their neighbors in Connecticut. Baker and Walsh are taking bows, but their crony capitalism is nothing to cheer.


TOPICS: Editorial; US: Massachusetts
KEYWORDS: charliebaker; cronycapitalism; generalelectric
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To: Buckeye McFrog

Ever since the moron voters of this Commonwealth elected that Commie Wolfe, not very.


21 posted on 01/20/2016 8:47:15 AM PST by Vigilanteman (ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
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To: kidd

This is nothing NEW, even though many think of it as evil “Crony Capitalism”.
In 1864 (!!) the City of ELGIN, Illinois gave, donated, and handed over 35 acres of farmland to a budding watch company PROVIDED the comany name the brand ELGIN.
This “freeby payoff” resulted in a hundred years of growth and steady employment for the area, in addition to the financial benefit accruing from the wages of the employees.
Elgin to to be the LARGEST producer of watch movement in the industry’s history. Gone now, but an example of there being nothing new.


22 posted on 01/20/2016 9:08:19 AM PST by CaptainAmiigaf (New York Times: "We print the news as it fits our views.")
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To: George from New England

How bad is Connecticut? When Massachusetts looks good in comparison, you know it’s bad.


23 posted on 01/20/2016 9:16:24 AM PST by The Antiyuppie ("When small men cast long shadows, then it is very late in the day".)
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To: George from New England

“GE should move south, hell not north!”

Jack Walsh is long gone, GE is Lib infested.


24 posted on 01/20/2016 9:19:50 AM PST by DAC21 (.z)
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To: bigbob

“What a bunch of BS. GE is a public company, accountable to it’s shareholders. If the laws allow it to take advantage of moving it’s corporate HQ, that’s their business and nobody elses. Business is ALL about winners and losers in an open market environment.”

No one forced the MA government into paying bribes. It was entirely legal, and much cheaper than building an environment that produces an educated, qualified workforce, a good quality of life, lower taxes, and so on. </s>. In the case of MA, they do have a very good, albeit expensive, work force from what I’ve seen of government statistics.


25 posted on 01/20/2016 9:20:19 AM PST by The Antiyuppie ("When small men cast long shadows, then it is very late in the day".)
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To: Buckeye McFrog
Everyone seemed to be participating, not just Northeast Libtards.

Fine with me. Too bad Florida didn't spend money to get GE.

26 posted on 01/20/2016 8:37:11 PM PST by VeniVidiVici (Obama = ISIS Fanboy)
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To: CaptainAmiigaf

Learn something new everyday


27 posted on 01/20/2016 8:37:21 PM PST by Nailbiter
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To: Kaslin

And in ten years when the Massachusetts tax breaks end, GE will demand an extension or they will more once more. ... A great racket for the corporations, a lot like the NFL owners, blackmailing the municipal governments for tax payers to build them a new stadium.


28 posted on 01/21/2016 6:48:26 AM PST by 2001convSVT (Going Galt as fast as I can.)
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