At BridgeDetroit, journalist Tom Perkins reports…

Supporters of the [USD$60,000,000.00] tax break insisted at the time [2022] that the Hudson’s site would create 2,000 new jobs and net $71 million in new city tax revenue from the additional workers. […] But Detroit will not see a net gain in new jobs or local tax revenue for the estimated 850 GM RenCen employees – it simply moves existing jobs from one building to another [em. mine – r2 ], which will not generate new tax revenue for the city.

This reduces Bedrock’s projected new job creation total to 1,150 and its new income tax impact by 43%, which means the Hudson’s Detroit site could now, at best, generate about $52 million in new tax revenue. Three economists who reviewed the analysis called it fair but “conservative,” and said the project will likely create very little, if any, net positive tax revenue.

“It was sold as a transformational project, but we were never told the transformation would include moving jobs a few blocks down the street,” said Michael LaFaive, director of the Mackinac Center For Policy, which analyzes and opposes corporate tax incentives.

Follow the lady! GM is merely shuffling jobs from Point A (RenCen) to Point B (new Hudson’s Building). There’s always 52 cards in the deck. Just like the nearby casinos, “The House” always wins. Jackpot: $8 million!

  • @some_guy
    link
    22 months ago

    Tax incentives granted to rich corporations steals money from city services and benefits only the corps.