What happened to the talk about jobs?

Published August 8, 2013

by Thomas Mills, Politics North Carolina, August 7, 2013.

Remember all that talk about creating jobs during the 2012 campaign? What happened? We barely heard the word “jobs” during the entire, painful legislative session. We heard plenty about motorcycle abortions, Sharia Law, state religions and guns, but nothing about jobs. On the economic front, we heard about tax cuts for the rich euphemistically referred to as “tax reform.” We heard about cutting regulations and improving the state’s “business climate.”

So, what about jobs? Well, it turns out that in Republican-speak, “profits” means “jobs.” You see, Republicans believe that as long as companies and investors are making a profit, then people will have jobs. While there may be some truth in that theory, it doesn’t mean the jobs are in North Carolina or even in the United States.

To help businesses and investors increase their profits, Republicans cut their taxes which in turn reduces the money available to government. Republicans argue that it’s necessary to get our economy moving again. We don’t have to look too far to see how this strategy works.

In the upper Midwest, manufacturing began leaving before the trade treaties of the 1990s came into effect. Many of those jobs actually came South where low-wages, low taxes and no unions were the draw. However, when they got a better deal, those companies just moved again to places like Mexico, Honduras, Vietnam and China.

But in an effort to lure them back home, Indiana latched on to the low-tax, small government strategy that we’re embarking on now. So how did that work out? Well, according to the Tax Foundation, great. Indiana has 11th best business climate in the country. Unfortunately, it’s per capita income is in the bottom 20% of the country, almost one third of households are low-income and it’s unemployment rate is stuck at about 8.5%. And it’s been that way for awhile. Average income actually fell in Indiana between 2001 and 2011.

Those manufacturing jobs just didn’t come back to Indiana and they are not going to come back here, either. However, manufacturing is making a slight come back in the country. So where are they going? Places like Minnesota, high tax states, with strong unions. Why? Because those states invested in education and training, believing that the future was a knowledge-based economy. Today’s manufacturing is part of the knowledge-based economy. Companies are looking for a highly-skilled workforce and the infrastructure to train and educate their workers to keep up with rapidly changing technology.

Republicans in North Carolina have us on a race to the bottom. They’re in search of a “business climate” that has little correlation to economic success and their focus on profits instead of jobs is a misguided economic strategy. Instead of looking to states that have recovered from the Great Recession, we’re looking to those who were suffering before it even started.

 

August 8, 2013 at 9:21 am
Richard Bunce says:

Another political hack in fear of losing his sugar daddy...

"Thomas Mills has spent twenty years as a political and public affairs consultant. He grew up in rural North Carolina in a family where politics dominated much of the conversation. Among his earliest memories is the 1968 Democratic primary, which occurred on his fifth birthday, when, in the one-party South, his father won election to the district court bench and his uncle won election to the state house.

After graduating from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he spent several years as a carpenter and social worker. He began working on political campaigns in the early 1990s. Since then, he has worked on political and advocacy campaigns in states across the country. In 2004, he was part of the direct mail team for the Kerry-Edwards campaign and Democratic National Committee, when his firm provided all the direct mail for New Hampshire, the only state to turn from red to blue.

Thomas has overseen political campaigns that range from city council to U. S. Senate. He has worked with numerous professional, trade and nonprofit organizations to help them better communicate with their members and the general public. His work has been recognized with numerous awards including Best Presidential Mail."

August 8, 2013 at 11:34 pm
dj anderson says:

While I'm not sure of the blog's author, I sure hope the blog is wrong.