So, I didn't post my writing group paper last week. I'll post last week's now, and this weeks in a day or two. Have fun Dame und Herr.
Is Michigan job loss really such a puzzle?
For over one hundred years, Michigan was an industrial and productive capstone. A wealth of natural resources launched Michigan to the top of lumber, copper, and iron production. The Michigan business environment allowed several major entrepreneurs to take root and flourish. Kellog, Dow, Ford, R.E.Olds, these men and others like them carried Michigan to a position of industrial and technological leadership. As recently as the mid 1990s, the city of Lansing produced more cars than any other city on earth.
Yet now Michigan has the 36th most hostile business environment, with business taxes 50% higher than the average. Though still possessing key chemical and industrial capability, Michigan is certainly in a downward spiral. Unfortunately, the governor’s office is taking the route of government intervention and micromanagement, activities that do nothing to reassure businesses that the state government will not change the rules mid-game or raise taxes to pay for the next “great idea”.
Two instances in particular bear review, one because it is recent, and the other because of the sheer magnitude of the repercussions that can be expected.
The most recent ‘great idea’, and a prime example of the micromanagement that has become typical of this administration, involves further expenditure of state Medicaid money to create jobs in assisted living facilities. On April fifth, two thousand and five, WZZM News reported on Granholm’s "Jobs Today Jobs Tomorrow" initiative.[1] In a nutshell, this initiative would pay an additional five dollars per day for each Medicaid recipient residing at a facility. The governor intends that this money be reinvested in new construction and new staff, turned around and reanimated as additional Michigan jobs. Granholm is quoted in the article as stating that this program would provide approximately an additional $91,000 a year for each fifty residents on Medicaid at a facility. Though the program is labeled by the governor’s office as “revenue neutral”, it is unclear where, in a state budget $375,000,000 in the red,[2] the money to pay this extra $1800 per person would come from. Perhaps most dismayingly of all, Granholm is quoted in the article as saying that this initiative is anticipated to create five thousand jobs over the next three years, many of them temporary jobs relating to construction, but some nurses and other permanent staff. For a project that will currently cost an estimated $638,750,000 per year,[3] why settle for merely five thousand jobs of uncertain duration? What would happen instead if the state did not spend that money at all, but demonstrated restraint in tapping the pockets of residents and taxpayers – an effect, that if maintained, would surely increase the willingness of employers to locate in Michigan. Touted as a quick, temporary, fix, I see “Jobs Today Jobs Tomorrow” as instead becoming a permanent part of state Medicaid, ever more expensive as the allotment is pushed higher and higher.
The second example deserves more space than it will receive, but has also already been the subject of many writings and so will only be very briefly discussed here. 690 acres of land in southeast Michigan were put up for auction with two legislated requirements – that the bid accepted must equal or exceed estimated market price, and that the state retain water/mineral rights. Of the two bids; one met the criteria and one did not. The appraised value was $11.5M, the high bid was $25M, and the low bid of $9M was also contingent on obtaining all water/mineral rights. Despite the no-brainer that would seem to be dictated by constraints of the legislature, the governor’s office proceeded with selling the land to the low-bidder, supported by new legislation passed after the bidding.[4] Not surprisingly, the high-bidder filed suit, and, though rebuffed once, is continuing to appeal.[5]
Though there is still hope that the high-bidder will prevail, this incident has sent an unfortunate message to corporations; the only sure way of starting or expanding business in Michigan is to be the politically favored party, otherwise you may find the rug pulled out from under you. Businessmen do not like unpredictability. Nor do they like seeing signs that a state government cannot keep is hands in its own pockets. Result: Do business – and provide jobs – elsewhere.
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