|
it has been tried.
The idea in Los Angeles was to lure new businesses to inner cities. The biggest problem is that the infrastructure and educational resources of the neighborhoods weren't improved, though. Republican mentality is to assume business can fix everything, but businesses won't even move into an area if the basics they need to make a prophet aren't there. No tax cuts can educate a work force, or create consumers out of poverty, or immediately reduce crime so that employees and customers and property will be safe. Thus, the only businesses who move in are the businesses that had already found a market in the area. Since these are some of the poorest places in the country, businesses already had the economic incentives of low property cost to move in.
The Gulf Coast, especially New Orleans, is a little different, in that there is already a population that either lives there (in Mississippi) or wants to move back (in New Orleans) if they have a job. An enterprise zone won't bring a lot of new industry in, but it might help to make rebuilding more affordable, and thus quicker, for businesses that were there before. And in cases where businesses have been lost, other businesses that provide the same services will find it easier to move their.
Enterprise zones aren't good for creating new industry in a region, since businesses use a lot of criteria other than tax rates to decide where and when to open. They have to have a market, first of all. They have to have a work force educated and trained enough to work in that area. They have to have the infrastucture. Reaganomics--supply sided economics which is the basic heart of enterprise zone mentality--never understands that. Businesses will only build in a region that is already set up for them. They can't change the region to fit their business.
In Los Angeles, Harlem (where EZs have had some success), and other inner city regions, an EZ could work if it were accompanied by massive infrastructure spending, combined with training and education programs for the local residents. But it takes a shift to an FDR mentality, or even a Clinton mentality, to make them work, and Repubs can't handle thoughts that complex.
They could work on the Gulf Coast, though, if they are limited in duration, and are seen as a basic welfare hand-up program to help local businesses get back on their feet. Also, they need to reward businesses more for higher wages instead of building in incentives to lower wages--lower wages would be the worst thing possible to fight poverty in New Orleans and Mississippi (and the poverty there has been ignored). If EZs are seen as a way to reward outsiders from relocating to the region, thus encouraging outside businesses to compete against already established businesses in the region, then they will have a negative effect.
Not that I expect Bush to do anything right. We'd be better off if he went back on vacation and ignored the region, than with his neocon version of social engineering.
|