Carrier Will Move Jobs to Mexico, Despite Trump's Promise to Keep Them in Indiana
They must be sick of winning already.

Cronyist-in-chief Donald Trump promised in December that he would do whatever was necessary to keep Carrier, an HVAC manufacturer, from laying off employees at an Indiana factory and shifting those jobs to Mexico.
On Thursday, Carrier announced it will lay off 600 workers in Indiana and shift those jobs to Mexico.
While the decision is understandably devastating for the people who will lose their jobs, it's heartening to know that the government's influence over the economy does not extend so far that the president can point his finger and tell CEOs how high to jump.
Before he had even been sworn into office, Trump promised about $7 million in economic incentives to Carrier in return for keeping about 1,100 jobs at the company's Indiana facility. Trump also announced that Carrier was making a $16 million investment in upgrades at its Indiana facility. Those upgrades, the president-elect promised, would result in more jobs in future years.
But as it stands today, "the jobs are still leaving," Robert James, president of United Steelworkers Local 1999, told CNBC. "Nothing has stopped." CNBC reported Thursday that Carrier would make the first round of cuts—338 jobs—in mid-July, and another 290 cuts in December.
The $16 million in upgrades Carrier had promised will be used to automate sections of the factory, likely resulting in a further reduction in the number of workers needed to run the plant.
Carrier has little reason to stay, as CNBC points out. The company generated more than $57 billion in revenue last year. The promise of paltry $7 million over 10 years to stay in an outdated facility with high labor costs was not much of an incentive.
David Henderson broke down the details of the Carrier deal in a cover story for Reason earlier this year:
The tax credit amounts to $700 per job per year. Is that enough, on its own, to keep Carrier from moving the jobs? It seems unlikely. Companies don't relocate factories on a whim; the firm would have expected significant and lasting gains from the move. In fact, according to a Washington Post story, Carrier had claimed that its move to Mexico would have saved $65 million per year. That's two orders of magnitude more than the new tax credit.
I'm not privy to Carrier's reasoning here, but it's safe to guess that one of three things happened. Either Trump has become so politically toxic that breaking a promise made to a president doesn't matter anymore (and might actually reflect favorably on Carrier in some quarters); or the company never really planned to keep those jobs here and merely used Trump's willingness to grandstand to score a bunch of free advertising (dutifully provided by the cable news networks that just can't get enough of our celebrity president).
Or, perhaps, Carrier is negotiating against Trump for an even better deal.
Regardless, the Carrier deal is further evidence that the government negotiating deals with individual companies is a foolish way to run an economy. The United States gained more than 138,000 jobs in May. In a country of 326 million people, jobs will come and go by the thousands on any given day. A president can't play whack-a-mole with every company looking for a better situation somewhere else.
Keep in mind Carrier CEO Robert McDonough said the decision to relocate had nothing to do with the business climate in Indiana, but that they were frustrated with the "rising red tape" in Washington D.C.
Rather than spending money to bribe companies to remain or relocate to certain places, governments should aim to reduce the cost of doing business for all employers. Lower regulatory burdens, better tax climates, and greater worker freedom will give both employers and employees the chance to succeed at home.
States and local governments spend more than $70 billion annually on various economic incentive programs, according to Good Jobs First, a union-backed nonprofit. That money could be better spent on infrastructure and schools, the nonprofit argues. Or, I would add, to reduce the overall tax burden to make states and localities more attractive to all businesses, not just the favored few.
If President Donald Trump, the most powerful elected official in the world and the self-described maker of great deals, can't use his influence to stop businesses from relocating to other countries, maybe it's time to try a different tactic.
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LOL
Hey this is good news for Trumplings, it means those drug dealers and rapists will stay in Mexico.
MAKING AMURICA GREAT AGIN!
On reason Carrier feels it has to move is because of the costs of union wages.
Lefties should keep laughing about Americans losing their jobs because of decades of Democrat mismanagement in pushing for artificially high wages.
2018 election should be the final nail in the Democrat coffin.
Trumpista:"That's because those creeps love money more than they love their country!"
Libertarian:"That sounded very Marxian, Trumpista."
Trumpista:"Well... I just broke the closet door, didn't I?"
Libertarian:"What do you mean 'just'? Do you think your past anti-Market rants makes you a Capitalist?"
DEM ROBUTZ TAKUM ER JEBZ!
You see, households headed by robots cost the taxpayer like a bunch of money! The Center For Imitation Studies told me so with their bogus statistics!
What will America look like if we let every robot enter this country?
[Have I left out any other Trumpista clich??]
"...perhaps, Carrier is negotiating against Trump for an even better deal"
Trump, you magnificent bastard. I read your book!
That's crazy talk! What we need is to scare companies into submission! They should know that we(*) are not going to buy their products if they build them in Mexico or Somalia or something!
(*) "We" - pronoun used by Trumpistas and Marxists when they mean to use *I*.
Something akin to keeping the Trabant alive.
It was nothing more than grand standing by El Trumpo, making a promise he had no intention of keeping. Either people were fooled by him or were fools from the beginning.
At least he tried and people like trump for trying.
Democrats fail fail fail and just hurt America. People really are fed up with Democrat bad ideas.
"Democrats fail fail fail and just hurt America."
How is Carrier investing in Mexico a failure for Democrats? It was a democrat who signed the trade deal with Mexico. This has been long coming, and we have the Democrats as much as anyone to thank for it.
He never should've tried. There's nothing wrong with outsourcing.
Re: loveconstitutuon1789,
Yeah, he deserves brownie points...
:-/
Using protectionism to make up for our absurd regulatory regime send us on the pathway to Brazil. People think that companies off shore solely because their hourly rate is lower.
I always wonder if they know how much their union/government mandated health insurance costs. How about that environmental impact statement they had to create? How about the cost of ozone controls?
"Well my company doesn't pollute!" Congratulations, how about the companies who supply your factory?
For some reason we have made a decision in this country that we would rather worship Ghia and restrict the supply of healthcare under the guise of protecting patients, even though the cost of this worship is good paying manufacturing jobs. You don't get to beat on business to change the world and then scream when they take their ball and go elsewhere.
That's two orders of magnitude more than the new tax credit.
Trump: "so does that make it biglyer or biglyerest?"
This is so bizarre--this is somehow all Trump now--but when he started in on this we all got told that it wasn't Trump at all, that the deal had already been made and that he was just taking credit for it.
But I bet everyone's forgotten that.
Just like they all forgot that we watched --and commented on-- the manufacturing of the Russia issue.