Category Archives: Government

Thinking About Corporate Welfare, er, Incentives and Subsidies

This has been the "Year of Dell" here in Forsyth County, North Carolina.  The state of North Carolina gave Dell hundreds of millions of dollars worth of incentives to build their newest plant in the state and then Forsyth County/Winston-Salem chipped in tens of millions of their own to attract the company to our fair confines.  Obviously this caused much debate within the community, and although my gut tells me that these corporate incentives stink in principle my head also tells me that if that is the playing field we’re on then we must compete aggressively.

Personally I think the jury is out on whether the deal is good for the county/city/state.  I honestly think that Dell will come through with the jobs they promised, but if the deal was made simply on the merits of Dell’s direct employment numbers then the folks who made the deal on behalf of the governments are fools.  They aren’t fools; they’re counting on the Dell deal to attract other companies as suppliers (that is happening) and even more importantly they are sending a signal to other tech companies that this is a great region to open for business.  I hope they’re right; I hope that Dell leads to more tech companies moving here to replace the emaciated textile, furniture and tobacco industries.  We’ll have to wait and see.

My biggest worry, though, is that if something doesn’t change this will be just the beginning of a corporate welfare trend that can be quite harmful in the long-term.  Our neighbors to the west in Tennessee are already seeing an increase in companies looking for incentive deals similar to one it gave Nissan to move it’s headquarters there from California, and I’m sure NC is getting similar inquiries now as well.  Let’s not beat around the bush here; what the states are doing is bribing companies to open shop there.  They aren’t saying "Look at our great business environment with an educated workforce, a safe place for your employees to live and a progressive tax structure."  They’re saying "Look at our great business environment and the $200 million we’ll hand you to move here."  That’s bribery and you or I would be put in jail if we did the same thing.

Unfortunately all the state economic development folks think they have to do this in order to compete.  But do they really?  Dr. Jeffrey Cornwall of The Entrepreneurial Mind has this to say:

Since most of our economic growth and new job creation are a result of
entrepreneurial development, spending so much trying to attract
corporations to move their operations may be misguided. If there are
enough slack resources in state funding to offer rich incentive
packages, let’s cut tax rates instead and let the market generate jobs
and growth, as lower taxes and less government spur entrepreneurial
activity.

I agree with him.  What if NC and Winston-Salem/Forsyth County had used that same $200+ million dollars in incentives to create incentives for local entrepreneurs to build businesses based on the skills and infrastructure being left behind by the collapsing textile and furniture industries?  Yes those industries are getting their asses handed to them by the Chinese, but there are some smart people out there who can figure out a way to create new market niches that our own people can fill.

That leads me to an article I read in Business 2.0 the other day about the US cotton industry, which is the recipient of lots of subsidies from the Federal government.  Let’s just say that the system makes it hard for the US to claim a free-market environment with a straight face.  And even worse, since some of the subsidies are paid to foreign-owned multi-national companies some of these subsidies benefit other countries. 

The cotton people make the claims you always hear in stories like this: without the subsidies the average farmer will go under, whole farming communities will be devastated, etc.  Of course most of the subsidies go to large corporate operations as there aren’t many family farmers left, and it ignores the fact that the subsidies artificially suppress cotton prices.  That means that most cotton sells below cost, which on the surface means that without subsidies the industry would crash.  But without the subsidies prices would go up and growers could actually make an honest profit on their operations.

In fact some farmers are already planning for the end of subsidies by growing specialized cotton that sells at high prices and is in great demand due to it’s limited quantity.  That’s true free-market innovation.

So what’s my point?  My point is that by using incentives and subsidies we are engaging in corporate welfare.  We are incentivizing our businesses negatively and we’re instilling in them the habit of looking for a handout.  And we have to remember that prices always go up, so it’s only going to get more expensive to bribe these companies in the future.

And what about the hard-working entrepreneurs who get no handouts?  What message are we sending them?  Do you think that they feel the same level of resentment that the average hard-working individual feels when they hear about folks who abuse the welfare system?  Do you think they feel that the Dells and Nissans of the world are a 21st century version of carpetbaggers?  Wouldn’t you?

To my way of thinking these incentives and subsidies are literally un-American.  We need to get back to competing on true merit. Yes, I understand that other countries tilt the playing field in certain ways (dumping, unfair tariffs, etc.) but until we clean our own house we don’t really have a leg to stand on when we ask them to do the same.  I say we clean up our own act and then act quickly and aggressively to make sure others do the same.

Reading List October 14, 2005

  • CNN Seeks Blog Guru to Work with Blitzer (Micro Persuasion) – Everything about this potential gig sounds interesting, and I was seriously considering it until I read the part that says the blog guru will be working out of the DC bureau.  I just escaped D.C. and there’s no way I’m going back, even if it was working with a short guy named Wolf.
  • Grassroots Journalism: Actual Content vs. Shining Ideal (Online Journalism Review) – A review of "10 citizen journalism sites" including Greensboro101.com.
  • Why Google Wants AOL (Business 2.0) – It’s all about IM, installed user-base, protecting search territory, and…oh hell, just go read it.
  • Getting Flat, Part 1 (Linux Journal) – Doc Searls looks at Tom Friedman’s "The World is Flat" from the open-source software point of view.
  • Getting Flat, Part 2 (Linux Journal) – A must read.  Doc continues what he started in Part 1, and here’s just one of many good excerpts I could pull: "I can save Microsoft a pile of time and money by reporting a fact no school wants to admit, one that will
    flatten the world far more than any other factor: pretty much everybody is smart. What’s more, they’re all
    smart in their own ways."
  • For Future Journalists, It’s Cash, Not Causes (Cleveland Plains Dealer) – An opinion piece on the shocking news that today’s journalism want to make real money.
  • "Journalists Have to Get Smarter About Business" (Manship School of Mass Communication) – In a speech Peter Copeland, Editor and GM of Scripps Howard News Service, says that journalists have to get better at business in order to survive and thrive.
  • The Open Source Business Model (Moore’s Lore) – Dana posits that it isn’t enough to provide relevant space to advertisers, you also have to show them how to communicate with your audience. He says a lot more than that, but you get the gist.

Reading List October 13, 2005

Reading List October 12, 2005

  • Corante is Not Second Class Journalism (Moore’s Lore) – Should First Amendment protections be restricted to media companies?
  • Cramer Gest Prechterized (Moore’s Lore) – A loud Wall Street bull is starting to growl like a bear. which can’t be a good thing.
  • Online Search Company Taps Bloggers, Celebrities to Endorse Products (PR News) – The Rollyo story.
  • Who’s Connected? Companies that have their own website (bookofjoe) – Joe found some data in Financial Times that compares European countries by the percentage of companies with 10+ employees that have their own website.  France is at the back of the pack with just 26.3% of companies with their own website.  Joe then provides some background on why the French lag behind and compares them, unfavorably, with Argentina.  Of course I could have told Joe that the reason that France is lagging is because the French are so, well, French.
  • Banned Books Week – ‘Of Mice and Men’ Ranked #10 – (bookofjoe) – Here’s the money quote from this post: "She remarked that when she was a girl her mother was extremely unhappy with Winterson’s love of books and reading. Her main complaint? ‘You just can’t tell by looking at them what’s in them.’"
  • Sourcing, verification, bloggers and the Times (The Editor’s Blog – John Robinson) – John, the Editor of the Greensboro News & Record is asking some good questions of himself and other media folk.  If a major story came across his screen via a trusted blogger, but without sourcing would he go with the story?  Probably not.  But his paper did go with a major story based on a New York Times report that was also unsourced, even thought the Times has had credibility problems of late.  More credit to John that he’s willing to think about this.

Bad Information + Nosey Neighbor = Trouble

Here’s one of those stories that just freaks me out.  According to this article a man in Virginia is suing one of his neighbors and a company that provides access to a database of sex offenders for a fee.

To give you a synopsis of the story, this poor guy was never accused or convicted of a sex crime, but apparently he lived at a house that at one time had been the address of a man convicted of a sex crime.  The state of Virginia relies on the sex offenders to inform it when they change addresses (huh?) and obviously in this case the offender didn’t.  So the Florida-based company, National Alert Registry, Inc., had a classic database problem: garbage in/garbage out.

The company provides access to its database and an email alert service for a fee. A woman named Michelle Myers subscribed to the service and that’s how she came across this guy’s name.  So off she went and broadcast the information to people in the neighborhood, school officials and the homeowners association.

Of course this guy is suing the woman and the company for slander.  The woman’s attorney is using the old "free speech" and "it’s just her opinion" defense, but the man’s attorney rightly states that the courts have consistently found that slander does not constitute free speech.

Now I’m sure that this woman will argue that she was simply going on bad information, but she could have easily verified the information by looking at freely available court records.  This guy may have lived at the address of a registered sex offender, but his name wasn’t associated with it at all.  If you’re going to accuse someone of something this serious you damn well better have your facts checked.

As for the company, I’m sure they’ll argue that they are the victim of faulty state records, but again how hard would it be for them to verify a name against an address?  I have no problem with tracking registered sex offenders, but it is very important that the companies that engage in this activity get it right…or else.

Lastly, what about the state of Virginia?  What the heck are they thinking?  They rely on a convicted criminal to keep them informed of his whereabouts?  What could possibly go wrong?

The point here is that all of our lives have become an open book.  Without much effort we can find information about anyone we want, and vice versa.  For instance, I can tell you from a simple search on the InfoUSA.com
website that Ms Myers, who started this whole mess, lives on a road called Blacksmith Arch, which is
confirmed by the newspaper article, that her phone number is (757)
766-22** (I’m intentionally not using the last two digits), that the average yearly income in her neighborhood is
$61,000-$100,000 and that the average price of homes in her neighborhood is $200,000-$249,900.

For the most part I think that having information freely available and in the public is a good thing, but the trade-off is that we must be very careful in how we use that information.  As anyone who’s been on the wrong side of a rumor can tell you it is very hard to get the right version of the story out since most people only hear the first version.  It is imperative that when someone gets it wrong they pay a heavy price, which is why I hope the company and Ms. Myers get slapped silly.

Reading List September 27, 2005

Reading List August 7, 2005

  • Web 2.0: It’s a Great Time to be an Investor (Venturepreneur Partners) – An article by a venture capitalist that explains how the Web is changing from a "medium where information is simply published and remains static, into a
    platform where applications reside and services are distributed."
  • How to Write Using Stream of Conversation (Rexblog) – "I believe those of us who try to understand and interpret what is
    taking place when social media intersect with traditional media often
    place an emphasis on the idea that the article is the beginning of a conversation. However, reading Joi’s complete post, I’m reminded that an article (or post or story) comes mid-stream in the conversation."
  • Outgrowing the Grownup (Moore’s Lore) – How Eric Schmidt might be screwing up Google.
  • Google Balances Privacy, Reach (CNET via Moore’s Lore) –  Is Google a threat to your privacy?
  • The War on Truth (A-Clue.com) – An opinion piece about the "war on truth" currently being waged by conservatives in American politics.
  • The Drawdown Lowdown (Reason Express) –  Possible scenarios for US troop reductions in Iraq.
  • The London Flypaper (Reason Express) – "Standard pro-war flypaper doctrine has all the young Muslims
    flocking to Iraq to die for Allah, not staying home and trying to blow stuff up.
    Pointing this out does not mean claiming that George Bush is to blame for the London bombing of 7/21 or 7/7,
    the straw man that Bush supporters love to toss up."
  • Up in Smoke (New York TImes Magazine) – The Freakonomics guys look at what happened to crack cocaine.
  • Ostentatious Obscurity (Reveries.com) – Owners publicize their restaurant by making it a secret; unlisted phone number, no signs, hostess that denies its existence.  Only in New York.
  • Rules of Success-The Path of Least Resistance (Blog Maverick) – Mark Cuban says that the secret to success is providing the path of least resistance, or in other words make things as easy as possible for customers, not yourself.

Reading List July 28, 2005

  • IceRocket’s Secret Weapon (The Post Money Value) — How saying "Thank You" is a powerful business tool.
  • Tracking is Good (A VC) — Value in targeted marketing, and how customer tracking helps.
  • Onfolio – The Buzz Process (The Post Money Value) — Blogs change the landscape for getting testimonials and paid placement.
  • Cheap Shot in a Good Cause (Moore’s Lore) — Why free trade should not be values free.
  • Becoming an Un-Person (Moore’s Lore) — The ID system in the US is broken and Dana’s experience with the local Social Security Administration office is a good example of why.
  • The Christian Paradox (Harper’s via Chewie) — On American Christians and their un-Christian behavior.
  • Wartime Dispatches (Greensboro News & Record) — Stories about soldiers in Iraq who are from Piedmont Triad area.
  • Economics of Used Books (Boing Boing) — Why Amazon.com isn’t stupid for selling used books next to new books.
  • Spin Sucks (Feld Thoughts) — “First we have to decide what the right thing to do is; then we’ll
    think about the politics.  Otherwise we’ll just confuse ourselves. — Richard Snelling”
  • Acceptable Downtime (Feld Thoughts) — Why 99.999% up time may not be enough for online service providers.  Better said would be the importance of redundancy.
  • Delta and the "Internal" Memo (The Post Money Value) — About the absurdity of the concept of an "internal" memo in a company with more than 10 employees.
  • No More AO-Hell (Jeff Jarvis) — Jeff dumps AOL after a 12 year relationship and in the process of describing the dump he gives a cool retrospective on the evolution of the internet.