Without serious accountability, the rallying cry for more “job creation” is likely to amount to nothing more than empty rhetoric.
Especially since movements such as Occupy Wall Street began shining a spotlight on inequality, right-wingers have tried to rhetorically position the rich as engines of economic progress. However, the tired policies of trickle-down tax cuts don’t boost jobs.
For their part, liberals are advocating a new wave of spending to stimulate the economy. Yet, given a hostile Congress deep into election-year politicking, a jobs plan reliant on expanding government outlays is dead in the water. To bring much-needed relief to an ailing job market, we need a different solution.
Here’s one step we can take immediately that should command broad support across the political spectrum. Why not demand accountability for the public support we’re already doling out to companies large and small?
The watchdog group Good Jobs First recently reported that taxpayers currently spend $70 billion per year on business incentives. In return for tax breaks and other subsidies, companies routinely make big promises about the number of jobs they will create.
Sounds great. But there’s rarely any follow-up. We don’t know if these companies are keeping their promises, and they have few incentives to do so.
“Many states fail to even verify that companies receiving subsidies are meeting their job-creation goals and other commitments, and many more have weak penalty policies for addressing non-compliance,” wrote Michelle Lee of Good Jobs First upon the report’s release.
Many people argue that government should be run more like a business. But what company would enact policies that hugely affected its revenue stream without making sure it was getting a worthwhile return on its investment?
Any spending that’s supposed to generate new jobs should hinge on accountability. If a business promises to generate 1,000 new jobs in return for a public subsidy, our states and localities should demand that money back if the jobs never materialize.
Fortunately, we’re seeing some progress in this direction. In its $15-million program providing cash grants to companies that create jobs, Vermont included measures to get its money back from supported businesses if promised jobs don’t materialize. The state will publish online the names and penalties incurred by any companies failing to meet their obligations.
North Carolina and Virginia both have subsidy programs that carefully track grants, and companies must return tax dollars if they don’t prove that the public benefitted from them. Iowa, Oklahoma, and Maryland are also taking commendable steps to ensure accountability.
In other cases, investigative journalists and public interest activists are picking up the slack. They’re holding companies accountable on the public stage for job promises not kept.
One hopeful example has emerged over the past year in Chicago. There, diligent reporters at the Chicago Reader, along with advocates at the Illinois Public Interest Research Group, worked to expose a program known as tax increment financing. Half a billion dollars raised through property taxes were sent annually to fund this program, originally designed to help struggling neighborhoods attract investment that would spur economic development. But in practice, the program became an unaccountable slush fund.
Shamed by the exposé, three businesses — Bank of America, the insurance company CNA Group, and a financial exchange company called the CME Group — announced that they would give back a total of $34 million that the city of Chicago had paid in subsidies. In the case of the first two groups, the businesses had promised — and failed to deliver — a total of 2,700 jobs as a condition for public support.
Additionally, the uproar compelled Mayor Rahm Emanuel to announce reforms to that program, including outside auditing of whether businesses receiving public subsidies were actually meeting job-creation pledges.
Republicans can call for corporate tax breaks and Democrats for public funding to generate jobs. But unless we’re all calling for serious accountability, the rallying cry for more “job creation” is likely to amount to nothing more than empty rhetoric.
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This commentary was distributed by, and cross-posted at, Otherwords.org.
Photo published under Creative Commons license courtesy of Talk Radio News Service




16 Comments

I can’t believe all the ballyhoo conservatives ginned up with the job numbers because they won the tax cut extension argument. Where are the jobs? Ask the “job creators”. As Eastwood put it, if they don’t do the job, ya gotta let ‘em GO.
Somebody with a bad red hair comb-over should deliver the news to these guys: “YOU’RE FIRED!”
LOVE this post. It’ll be on the front page at 4:20 pm PT. Thanks for putting it up here, Amy.
Thanks for this info. You definitely echo what I wonder often.
It’s all very well for conservatives to use now-discredited Supply-Side Economics – or trickle down – as a justification for cutting the taxes of the super rich/1% as a method for “jobs creation.” So many citizens are happy to drink this KOOL AID, as if it somehow still remains the Gospel truth.
But wherever are the jobs?? I surely don’t see them. Even now some people still hail Mitt Romney as a great “jobs creator,” even though I still have yet to have one person name one specific job that Romney actually “created” whilst at Bain.
Keep up the good work. Maybe some of it will sink in.
A related question is whether anybody can deliver on the promised job growth in an environment of declining demand.
Chicago-based Boeing hasn’t had an order for the newest iteration of the 747 since July, 2011.
Do the Boeing executives understand the connection between the war on the middle class and their rapidly emptying order book? I doubt it.
Real job creation usually has a nexus to real needs. Only when Congress addresses the legitimate needs of an alleged mature industrialized society, hence the governed and republic will there be job growth in America. This will only happen when merit trumps money. Congress protects business models, not the Republic.
Adopt Jefferson’s/Madison’s Original 11th Amendment and castrate Citizens United and the “monied interests,” as the 12, 13 and 14th Amendments ended slaveholder’s monopoly on labor.
Job growth is an illusion with four dollar gas and four dollar diesel fuel. Like a drunk trying to sober up by drinking? America, we are slaves to a business model, which undermines all efforts to improve a quality of life.
You have no idea! I’ve been watching this shit all my life.
Vermont, Chicago? Apparently somebody up there shows some sense. They got promises from developers? Amazing.
In Texas companies, corporations, and real estate developers routinely demand (yes demand) tax concessions from the local permitting authority with no hint of obligation, much less an enforceable one. They know the right songs to sing, but find it anywhere in their permits. I always figured that’s what we call graft. If I have to believe these officials were just stupid, I will sit down and cry.
Notice I will not cry if I can believe they’re just criminals. I’m inured to that.
“President Barack Obama “is hostile to job creators,”
With recent news reports trumpeting record corporate profits and stock market highs, the trickle down should be a downpour and we should be drenched with jobs and raises.
What most are actually feeling is a tinkle an we all know what color that is!
On a smaller scale, I think a lot of local small businesses are trying to pad the count. I keep hearing on the bus that someone goes to an interview and finds that “well, we’re thinking of opening another store in another county, so we thought we’d interview”. That makes the want ads look good, but no one ever gets hired.
I suspect it is a way for some small retailers to get cheap ad space to show they are so successful that they are growing!
I personally have gone on interviews that turns out to be for a position that may be created in a few months.
Hate to say it but a company I worked for played this game more than once. Promise jobs in return for tax cuts. . No one ever came back to see if the jobs appeared and they never did. Now the boys at the company were prepared to prove beyond a doubt that times were even tougher and so the tax cuts meant they didnt have to lay off people.
But there should be an audit of this nonsense before and after. Hell just check the payroll records. And if they don’t come through pay the money back with interest no excuses.
There’s another angle going on here. Communities compete against each other for lower property taxes to attract businesses. Meanwhile the locals get to pay higher taxes to subsidize the job creators. That may mean laying off public employees if there is a tax backlash. And these days that and pay cuts are hurting. These are areas that I think Occupy or local progressive groups could help. Better that than strikes that seem to go no where.
In the end higher sales creates the need for more employees that’s just how it works in a capitalist system. Too bad we can’t fund non profits or public service needs to create jobs especially when things are as bad as they are now. Then when things get better those people could take a better job. Instead we like to fund defense companies to build planes and tanks who hire few people on the dollar. Romney wants to do away with the defense cuts. Ok but spend the money somewhere else to get more bang for the buck.
In fact the extortion racket corporations play on communities should be made illegal by federal law. It has pissed me off for more than forty years that business can demand that cities and States compete for the promise of locating some enterprise within their boundaries. David Cay Johnson has written several books on the subject.
Slave holders operate an extortion and extraction rackets based on skin’s color. Corporation are no different, while using the funds extracted from one’s sweat to protect business models which screw the republic. Jefferson is correct. These mfer’s suck the big one.
Modern corporate extortion is the same as the “tribute” paid to the Roman empire to leave cities and citizens intact, but under new management.
Where a city-state once gave hostages to ensure its docility and acceptance of new management, our municipalities and states offer its citizenry to become wage hostages to the promised new internationally controlled factory that is given 99 years of tax free profitability.
Where we could once readily see the brutality of the hun invasion and try to defend ourselves, we can’t understand the soft takeover methods of the huns in their modern limousines and lawyered up variety.
Part of the problem (again) lies who gets to frame the argument? I count a Wal-mart with 250 employees at $7.80 / hour; as technically creating jobs, because someone is paid a wage for doing some kind of work. However, I would consider those positions as jobs in only as I would saltines as "food". One does chew, swallow and digest soda crackers, yes, but they provide no long-term nutritive value and leave a person malnourished if eating nothing else. We should start calling workers "capital-gains creators", which is far more true than the affectation "job creator".