Las Vegas is running ads in California warning businesses they can "kiss their assets goodbye" if they stay in the Golden State. In New Hampshire, economic development officials pick up Massachusetts business owners at the border in a limousine and give them VIP treatment and a pitch about why they should relocate there. Indiana officials, using billboards at the borders and direct appeals to businesses in neighboring states, are inviting them to "Come on IN for lower taxes, business and housing costs." As states struggle to keep jobs in a continuing recession, they are no longer hoping businesses in other states happen to notice their lower taxes, cheaper office space and less-stringent regulations. They are taking the message directly to them and taking shots at their neighbor's shortcomings. ...No one does it more unapologetically than the Nevada Development Authority. The agency has picked on California before, but its $1 million campaign, launched this month, ratchets up the mockery of California's budget deficits and IOU paychecks. "It's all done tongue-in-cheek. But the underlying deal is, we want this business," Nevada Development Authority President and CEO Somer Hollingsworth said. ..."They do mask the nastiness of their message with humor, but this time, their ads are over the top," said [California Assemblyman] Solorio, a Democrat from Santa Ana.
Thursday, August 27, 2009
When Governments Are Forced to Compete, the Result Is Better Policy and More Liberty
A story in USA Today is a perfect illustration of the liberalizing power of tax competition. In an effort to attract more jobs and investment, states are competing with each - even taking the aggressive step of advertising in high-tax states. This does not guarantee that states will always use the best approach since states sometimes try to lure companies with special handouts, but tax competition generally encourages states to lower tax rates and control fiscal and regulatory burdens. The same process works internationally, which is precisely why international bureaucracies controlled by high-tax nations are seeking to thwart fiscal competition between nations:
Labels:
economics,
Fiscal Policy,
States,
tax competition
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