Crony Capitalism Is Apparently Business-Friendly
North Carolina wins "America's Top State for Business" by picking winners and losers.

It seems that in North Carolina, cronyism is a bipartisan virtue.
A new report by CNBC lists North Carolina as America's Top State for Business, based on a wide range of metrics. The site, which has compiled the list annually since 2007, noted the Tar Heel State has finished in the top 10 nearly every single year, coming in a close second for 2021. As for what put it over the top this year: "state leaders keep managing to put aside their very deep political divisions to boost business and the economy."
The article goes on to extol the virtues of North Carolina's current exercise in divided government, in which Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and a Republican-dominated General Assembly have worked together to craft financial incentives intended to lure companies to the state. Most recently, the article cites a deal from March in which VinFast, a Vietnamese electric vehicle manufacturer, will build a $2 billion factory in North Carolina's Chatham County, in exchange for $1.2 billion in subsidies. Additionally, the article lists a deal from 2021 in which Apple agreed to build "its first East Coast hub" in exchange for incentives totaling up to $846 million.
But despite CNBC's breathless praise, these types of deals have downsides.
In exchange for that $2 billion investment, the state had to agree to over $316 million in "reimbursement" to the company over 30 years, equaling 90 percent of the state income taxes withheld from its employees over that time. It also agreed to $450 million "to cover site preparations, road improvements, and additional water and sewer infrastructure." Additionally, Chatham County chipped in "over $400 million" in additional subsidies.
It's unclear why a company that is currently pursuing an IPO valuing itself at $60 billion would need that kind of help.
Meanwhile, the Center for Economic Accountability, which opposes corporate welfare, ranked North Carolina's deal with Apple as 2021's "Worst Economic Development Deal of the Year." The think tank cited, among other factors, the decision to remove nearly a billion dollars of taxpayer funds from state and county coffers in order to court a company that "has more money than North Carolina does."
Such lopsided deals are not uncommon. Typical beneficiaries include sports franchises, which despite being worth billions often receive hundreds of millions in taxpayer-funded subsidies to build new stadiums, even when existing stadiums are doing just fine. Last month, Charlotte approved a $215 million subsidy toward renovating the stadium used by the Charlotte Hornets. The city plans to fund the difference through increased taxes on rental cars and hotel rooms, but according to J.C. Bradbury, an economist from Georgia's Kennesaw State University, "The Charlotte Hornets do not bring a lot of tourism to Charlotte whatsoever." Any funds not recouped through the extra taxes will simply be borne by the city's residents.
Perhaps the most galling example is Wisconsin's Foxconn plant, announced in 2017 by then-Gov. Scott Walker. In exchange for the tech giant spending $10 billion on a factory which would employ over 13,000 people, the state pledged $3 billion in state subsidies, including $1 billion from the nearby town of Mt. Pleasant. Four years later, the company admitted that it would ultimately invest less than $700 million, and employ fewer than 1,500 people. The state was able to rescind and recoup most of the tax subsidy, but Mt. Pleasant had already seized and bulldozed homes and taken on hundreds of millions in debt in preparation for the factory. Ultimately, the town's credit rating was downgraded.
There are plenty of things that a state can do to entice businesses, like streamlining its tax code or modernizing its infrastructure. But by doling out taxpayer dollars to companies as an incentive, state governments subvert the market and set their citizens up to foot the bill for anything that goes wrong. As the Tax Foundation wrote in 2006, "targeted tax preferences…may provide short-term economic stimulus, but ultimately they increase tax complexity and compliance costs, encourage costly industry rent seeking, and raise tax burdens elsewhere in the economy."
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What causes the disconnect between CNBC's "wide range of metrics" and the CEA's reckoning? Is CNBC's analysis cockeyed, or is the CEA focusing too narrowly on faults rather than broadly on benefits?
Or might it be that what you consider "crony capitalism" truly is "business friendly" in some objective sense when comparing one state to others?
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Anybody using the term 'crony capitalism' to describe anything is simply virtue signaling to Marxists. There is nothing capitalist about collecting tax revenues and redistributing them.
Joe Lancaster embodies everything that is wrong with modern journalism. He can't even repeat what people much smarter than him have said without getting it wrong, let alone synthesize it for the masses. Are we sure he is not an AI?
I know this is pedantic, but the term for a lack of government control over the economy is "the free market". "Capitalism" is a word invented by marxists to denigrate the free market.
Even that's confusing since "capitalism" is often used now to refer to capital markets specifically. It's one of my least favorite terms because it's so unspecific.
Marxism has had similar drift, but it at least did originate in the theories of a guy named Marx. No such consistency from capital as you noted.
And as Clarence Carson and others have pointed out, "capitalism", based on its construction like other "-ism" words, would mean rule by capital, or by the owners of capital, so socialist countries where the capital is owned by the state are capitalist.
That's why I say "free enterprise", and don't say "capitalism" to mean that.
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I think it's fair. In a cronyistic setting the means of production are not centralized in a Marxist fashion. It's not like free markets and marxism are the only two systems and they dual with each other.
This is more like an old school mercantilist vibe. I think cronyism is a completely legitimate title though. It's not very marxist. It's just also shitty like marxism is.
Very interesting to see whether libertarians defend these subsidies to corporations.
Obviously it goes completely against the principles of libertarianism to pick winners and losers in a free market. Yet, I have a feeling that many commenters here don't have a problem with unequal government subsidies to businesses.
Strange disconnect.
That all depends on what you consider a “subsidy”.
If we’re talking direct payments from state coffers, that’s obviously bullshit. If we’re talking tax breaks, I don’t think many libertarians would consider a person or business keeping more of the money they earned a subsidy. The problem with those is that the state governments are selectively granting them, and usually only to outside groups they are trying to woo.
Exactly. The "selective" aspect makes it a subsidy. If you and I are competing businesses, and you get a government tax break, while I have to pay the full tax, then the government is effectively granting you a subsidy, because I can no longer compete on an equal footing.
So if a government promises to give a company a tax break, it is definitely a subsidy, unless they also give tax breaks to all of its competitors to level the playing field.
No, I still wouldn't count that as a subsidy. If you figure it that way, then progressive income taxation is a "subsidy" to low-income people (or to people who are otherwise able to lower their income tax exposure). It would make real estate tax exemptions for nonprofits "subsidies". It would make the absence of liquor taxes on items other than liquor a "subsidy" of those items. And so ad infinitum.
And that would all be true!
Obviously it goes completely against the principles of libertarianism to pick winners and losers in a free market. Yet, I have a feeling that many commenters here don't have a problem with unequal government subsidies to businesses.
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Well, you're just continuing your impressive streak of being wrong.
This prediction is going well.
I agree that states shouldn't be in the business of picking winners and losers. I'd also apply the same to the federal government. But, I'm curious, does that extend to particular classes of winners and losers? Should the federal government be granting certain classes of businesses (say ones started before 1980) legal protections they don't afford their competitors? If not, what about businesses that operate online, rather than brick-and-mortar? Should they get special protection? Like, say, for publishing slander or IP violations that their brick-and-mortar have legal liability for?
Do Dewey and Howe Counties border Cheatham County?
Crony capitalism is business friendly… and it picks its friends very carefully.
Are we talking about section 230?
From some of the things I read I could conclude that since China is kicking our economic asses, planned economies are the way to go.
It is ever thus: if a politician can garner bribes from beneficiaries of his measures, OR might garner re-election votes from his beneficent measures (FAR less likely,), he will grant such benefits.
It's bribery. One way or another.
The way to prevent it is to deny the power in the first place. The only way.
I'm not a fan of the tax-break approach to attracting business investment but I don't agree with Lancaster that it "subverts" markets. It creates a different market.
Suppose you want to build a billion-dollar plant that will employ 1,000 people. While there are many locations competing for your investment, you've narrowed your selection down to two locations based on land prices, employment pool, transportation, etc.
Location A says "we'd love to have you here". Location B says "we'd love to have you here and we'll give you $100 million in tax breaks". Which are you going to choose? Will the citizens of Location A be proud of their principled leaders or will they vote them out of office for not bringing in new jobs?
The only way to prevent this is to have EVERY community in the country agree to stop offering tax breaks. Good luck getting that agreement. Even if you get an agreement, how long will it last? Cartels usually collapse.
Perhaps one could push for federal legislation outlawing crony deals, but that's a big government solution and not a libertarian approach.
This happened in New York. AOC (hardly a libertarian!) drove out Amazon by campaigning against the subsidies they were aiming to receive to set up shop.
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/14/nyregion/amazon-hq2-queens.html
In this case, her constituents applauded her for sticking to her principles, even though it meant that Amazon withdrew its offer.
Even worse than tax breaks, Amazon wanted the lot on NY for 99 years at $31.25 a square foot. Average price per sq.ft. was $44 to $55 at that time.
Source: https://www.gothamgazette.com/opinion/8132-the-fuzzy-fine-print-of-amazon-s-queens-real-estate-deal
P.S: Amazon came back later anyway, without any subsidies. Looks like New York is a good enough place to stand on its own merits.
Crony capitalism is a mostly big business proposition and more a Democratic issue than a Republican. The Republican's power base is mostly small business. Still, if the Electical vehicle business is successful the tax base of the employee's of the company will more than make up for the tax give away by the states. Like all business ventures it is a gamble, a gamble which Wisconson lost.