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Businesses Government The Almighty Buck United States

Even Fixing Wisconsin's Foxconn Deal Won't Fix It, Says State-Requested Report (theverge.com) 168

The Wisconsin Department of Administration is requesting a reassessment of the costs and benefits of the LCD factory Foxconn is building in the state. Since Wisconsin offered Foxconn a record-breaking subsidy in 2017 to build the facility, the Taipei-based company has significantly scaled back its plans and delayed the project. The Verge reports: The report, which was conducted by Tim Bartik of the Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, finds that the smaller facility raises the already unusually high cost per job even further. If the subsidy levels in the current contract are kept, each Foxconn job would cost taxpayers about $290,000, Bartik found, compared to $172,000 if Foxconn built the original $10 billion, 13,000-job facility. For comparison, Bartik estimated the subsidies Virginia offered Amazon for its second headquarters amounted to between $10,000 and $13,000 per job. "The most important conclusion of this analysis is that it is difficult to come up with plausible assumptions under which a revised Foxconn incentive contract, which offers similar credit rates to the original contract, has benefits exceeding costs," Bartik wrote. "The incentives are so costly per job that it is hard to see how likely benefits will offset these costs."

While Bartik produced the memo in response to a request from the Wisconsin Department of Administration, he notes that it was produced independently and that its conclusions do not necessarily reflect the views of the department or the Upjohn Institute. He doesn't know whether Gov. Tony Evers has been briefed on his report, but he says he shared it with Mark Hogan, the head of the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation, who objected to its conclusions. Hogan, who served under Evers' predecessor Scott Walker, said in a statement that the current contract protects Wisconsin taxpayers. "This study makes assumptions that could not occur under the existing 'performance-based' contract between WEDC and Foxconn. The plain fact is the company would not be able to retain any incentives if, by the year 2023, it had only created either the 1,500 or 1,800 jobs the study is based on," Hogan wrote in a statement. Bartik says he doesn't find a persuasive defense in the idea that the project has a reasonable cost per job if it goes into default, all clawbacks are promptly paid, and Foxconn still keeps 1,500 jobs in the state.

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Even Fixing Wisconsin's Foxconn Deal Won't Fix It, Says State-Requested Report

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 07, 2019 @10:07PM (#59060882)

    I bet when it's his money on the line he'll figure out some way to get out of it.

    • by unixisc ( 2429386 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @11:54AM (#59063010)

      Or re-negotiate the subsidies so that they only apply when the company meets the targets that the state had when it offered the subsidies. If the company scales back, the subsidies get reduced or eliminated.

      That would force the company to do a cost analysis of what's beneficial while determining its execution plan

  • Claw Back (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Claw back the subsidies. They wouldn't have been a good deal for the state even if the promised benefits came to fruition. FoxCON never intended to live up to their end of the deal in the first place; all they wanted was a free factory. Claw 'em back!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    So that's trump's economy for you. BRING TEH JERBS BACK! No, go smoke another pipe full of meth you gullible crayon eating red state dimwit.

    Collectively trump voters are dumber than a bag of hammers to have believed his lies.

    • by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @05:21AM (#59061712) Homepage

      So that's trump's economy for you. BRING TEH JERBS BACK! No, go smoke another pipe full of meth you gullible crayon eating red state dimwit.

      Yep. Trumps "job creation" scheme is based on giving companies/corporations free money. Over a trillion dollars per year in the for of tax cuts.

      ie. It's taxpayer money. Guess what's going to happen to all those jobs when the scheme collapses? Guess what state the economy's going to be in after a few more years if racking up trillion dollar deficits? Guess which party is going to have to try and fix the mess (Republican??). Guess which party will take the blame for the "miserable years" that it will take to fix it ("Remember the Trump years when everybody ha d a job"?).

      The USA is fucked thanks to the giant orange Ooomps Loompa they elected.

      PS: How's the Swamp Draining(tm) going?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        The Two Santa Claus Theory is still working great.

      • PS: How's the Swamp Draining(tm) going?

        Oh that went well. The swamp is gone. We replaced it with waste water sludge settling tank piped directly to everyone's toilet. Oh what? Clean water? We never said that. We only said we'd drain the swamp, no one actually bothered to ask what we would do with the space once the swamp was gone.

  • by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Wednesday August 07, 2019 @10:19PM (#59060918) Journal

    The "right" people got paid and/or were promoted. Everything went as planned. Where's the beef?

    • Somewhere in Wisconsin there is an underpaid civil servant driving a band new Tesla. Follow the money, follow the blat.

      Suitcases full of cash in a dark parking lot. Dumb as rocks offspring admitted to elite schools.

      • Two things:

        1) A brand new Tesla Model 3 has about the same TCO in the first 5 years as a nicely loaded Toyota Camry. That's not out of the reach of most middle-class families, which is where civil servants tend to fall. A civil servant with a Tesla is definitely not a mark of corruption.

        2) The Republicans, under Walker, got rid of or severely down-scaled several state agencies tasked with economic matters. Then they helped create the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation, and passed that state money to

  • Wisconsin Department of Administration "I have altered the deal. Pray I don't alter it any further." -(Bartik leaves again. Mount Plesant is left holding the dress.) Wisconsin taxpayers: "This deal's getting worse all the time!"
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Wednesday August 07, 2019 @10:55PM (#59061008) Homepage

      How about, you are just looking at the wrong metric. It is not the ration of government subsidies and tax breaks per job created, it is the ratio of government subsidies and tax breaks per dollar of campaign contribution. Probably that ratio was really efficient, a whole lot of tax breaks and subsidies for way in excess of campaign contribution, Wisconsin the ultimate in campaign contribution tax break efficiency, getting you the biggest tax break for the least amount of campaign contributions, as preferred by the majority of corporations.

      It is not about the jobs, that's just advertising, it is all about delivery cost efficient legislation, the most efficient legislation per dollar of campaign contributions. Don't anyone pretend it is any thing different from that, equal access open to foreign corporations as readily as local corporations.

      • So you're saying that it's cheaper to buy legislators in Wisconsin than it is in high price states like California and New York?

  • And they had something no one else could offer lots and lots of fresh water. Foxconn needed the fresh water and it would be a lot cheaper if they could pollute with as little regulation as possible. No other states had that much water to give. The USA has signed treatise with Canada about removing water from the great lakes. Generally American's don't feel obliged to uphold their sides of treatise but they generally don't do it so blatantly as Wisconsin intended.

    Now Wisconsin felt they needed a big c
    • by Rastl ( 955935 )

      Wisconsin went it alone on granting access to lake water, without even asking the other signatories of The Great Lakes Compact. That group of states bordering the great lakes that is supposed to agree on usage of that precious resource. They simply said "Take our highly sought after resource along with all these subsidies!" and ignored the outrage of the other states.

      The previous administration ignored the protests of the residents of that area who were forcibly displaced. They ignored the reports pointing

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday August 07, 2019 @11:23PM (#59061086)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • bribe companies to re-locate to sub-optimal locations hoping it will jump start their economy

      I don't think anyone involved in the deal expected it to jump start the state's economy. This was a political move from the beginning, with the main goal being for the politicians to be able to claim that they brought the manufacturing jobs back, and that things were going back to the way they were in the "good 'ol days."

      • Exactly right. Next door in Minnesota they're pushing biotech and tech companies, and their economy is booming. Wisconsin wanted to stay red and play to their base and tried to keep pretending that manufacturing was still a thing.

        It's not.

    • What data do you have to support the claim that "it never does"?
  • by LostMyAccount ( 5587552 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @06:34AM (#59061826)

    I'm kind of curious -- could the per-job subsidy have been spent on doing actual government work -- cleaning, basic repairs, sort of WPA-style stuff? I mean you could have paid people ~35k per year for four years on the low end of the subsidy.

    I'm sure the original deal was based on some pie-in-the-sky estimates of Foxconn becoming a long-term institution in the state, not only employing thousands for decades, but creating an ecosystem of suppliers, customers, etc, and direct state sponsored jobs wouldn't do this.

    If they're gonna give away money, they might have well just done sub-market loans to existing small business and some kind of infrastructure enhancements vs. giving it away to a foreign multinational. That would probably have more long-term value for the economy than giving it to Foxconn.

    • Say what you want about the inefficiency and bureaucracy of state jobs, at least they are non-profit. When you're paying companies for jobs, there's every incentive to suck up as much taxpayer money as possible.

  • If the subsidy levels in the current contract are kept, each Foxconn job would cost taxpayers about $290,000

    Clearly we need to replace this with something more efficient, like another massive public assistance bureaucracy ...

  • Does he think Foxconn will go bankrupt and won't be able to pay the clawbacks? Otherwise how the isn't it a defence to point out that the terms of the contract make it impossible for his calculations of the subsidy costs to be correct, because the subsidies will be clawed back.

    I find his single line hand rejection of their defence without argument unpersuasive ... this all smacks of partisanship.

  • ...to rich corporations, this shit will just continue. It's not even their own money, it's OUR money. Taxpayers keep subsidizing big businesses while land, property, capital, and other assets are privatized and increasingly owned by fewer and fewer people. I'm growing wary of this oligarchy of a nation the Repugs are turning us into. What was the point of the American Revolution if we're just going to unseat a King by Blood only to replace him with a King by Revenue?

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