Ohio Pledges Over $150 Million in Taxpayer Money for Honda Factories
Honda, one of the world's largest automakers, announced it would spend $4 billion building and upgrading factories in Ohio. The state is showering it with public funds anyway.

One of the world's largest automakers is making a huge investment in U.S. manufacturing, but, as usual, local taxpayers aren't getting off scot-free.
Last week, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine made a major announcement: Honda, as part of its pledge to sell only electric vehicles (E.V.) by 2040, will spend over $4 billion building up its electric manufacturing capacity in the Buckeye State. That amount includes $3.5 billion to build a new battery plant in partnership with LG Energy Solution, plus $700 million to retool three existing Ohio Honda plants for E.V. production. The Japanese auto giant claimed the investment will create over 2,500 jobs.
The governor's announcement said the state would "consider a tax credit" and that his administration "plans to work with the General Assembly to secure state funding" for site preparation. Later in the week, the Ohio Department of Development announced that it would be seeking more than $150 million in state incentives: $71.3 million for a 30-year tax credit and $85 million in local infrastructure improvements to support the new plant.
Of course, all of that money comes from state taxpayers, and each dollar spent on Honda is one dollar less spent to the benefit of the Ohioans it came from. And this may just be the start.
"The $150 million price tag isn't final," John Mozena, president of the Center for Economic Accountability, which opposes corporate welfare, tells Reason. "The real subsidy money in Ohio comes from JobsOhio." How? Well, Ohio's Department of Liquor Control has a monopoly on "the manufacturing, distributing, licensing, regulation, and merchandising" of all alcohol. JobsOhio is a private, nonprofit corporation created by state law that collects the revenues from state liquor activity and invests any profits into state development projects.
Despite receiving its funds from a state-mandated monopoly* and deciding how it's spent, JobsOhio is exempt from most public ethics laws and the Ohio Public Records Law. A JobsOhio spokesman said last week that the firm would not release information about potential funding for the Honda factories until a final deal was reached.
Citing his organization's research, Mozena points out that "automotive manufacturers make decisions…based on industry trends and general business conditions, not state subsidies. For instance, it was only two years ago that General Motors shut down its Lordstown plant [in Ohio] despite tens of millions of dollars in 'job creation' subsidies in place. But don't worry about G.M., they still got to keep about $20 million in subsidies for creating jobs that no longer existed."
Considering that Honda already pledged more than $4 billion to the project and that the company's market cap is nearly 10 times that amount, forking over $150 million in incentives seems trivial. Plus, JobsOhio could kick in more funding as well. That presents two unappealing possibilities: Either the state gives a small fortune to a company that doesn't need it, or an unaccountable agency with access to public money kicks in even more funding, money that won't be used elsewhere on something that benefits the state as opposed to a major automaker.
"Tax incentives to specific companies are not the best way to generate widespread, sustained economic growth," Rea Hederman Jr., vice president of policy at The Buckeye Institute, an Ohio-based free market think tank, tells Reason. "Instead, better economic policy is to have lower tax rates so all companies from small to large can grow."
*CORRECTION: According to JobsOhio's FAQ, despite being managed by a state-created entity and funded by a state-mandated monopoly, "revenues or receipts related to the transfer of the liquor franchise are exempt from the applicable statutory definition of 'public money.'"
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For instance, it was only two years ago that General Motors shut down its Lordstown plant [in Ohio] despite tens of millions of dollars in 'job creation' subsidies in place.
GM laughed at Donnie Dipshit's factually inaccurate mean tweets on that subject.
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If the state doesn't put in any money, the politicians can't direct who gets the contracts.
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Honda, as part of its pledge to sell only electric vehicles (E.V.) by 2040
Fonda will never have a motor in the back of her Honda.
Fonda's already had a whole boatload of motors through the back of her Honda. Barbarella Visits Caligula made sure of that.
Nobody cares about Ohio.
There’s a difference between a tax credit and actually paying out money. It’s not quite the same as making taxpayers subsidize it. There's more than a semantic difference between money you're being given, and money you're being promised will not be taken from you.
But the millions they’re spending on free infrastructure is a different story.
IF the State wants to do this..fine. Let each state try this stuff...basically the taxpayers of Ohio will be subsidizing my new Honda..thank you residents of Ohiio
Is this bad because of who, or because of what?
They're promising to give you all Bob's money!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=enTEvon9pbw
Remy is a treasure!
Well, that's quite prophetic...
Reason's going to have to pick a side here. Either committing hundreds of millions of taxpayer funds to a foreign entity is good, or it's not.
I will increase the value of this property by $4B if you don’t tax me on that $4B for a few years.
Give away?
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We've all heard, to the point of severe nausea, about our homegrown "job creators". You know, all the high-finance Titans of Wall Street of whom none went to jail or gave up their bonuses after nearly crashing the entire world's economy in 2007-2008 by flooding the markets with less than worthless CDOs and derivatives. Too bad about the folks the sheriffs kicked out of the houses they bought with loans the home mortgage bandits knew they couldn't afford. Too bad about the retirees who lost their pensions and/or savings when the crash came. Too bad about us, the taxpayers, who were forced to cough up the TARP bailouts until the Titans felt comfortable about seeing to it that small business owners (the real job creators we're told) could borrow the money they needed to recover. Let's not forget about all the other "job creators" among the 1% and the 5% who generally don't do anything of the kind. What they actually do is pay so-called "wealth management" consultants to advise them about how to keep all the money they already have and how to rake in even more. So what am I missing when I read about new factories and jobs coming to Ohio without the Titans and those other "job creators" putting anything of their own on the line? Why is any taxpayer money at all going towards these projects? After all, $150 million would amount to a rounding error on the balance sheets of our biggest banks.
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