“Missouri First”: Tax Credits Go From Bad to Worse

Economy |
By Sarah Brodsky | Read Time 1 minute

As Christine Harbin has convincingly argued, targeted tax incentives for businesses are a poor use of resources. When the state gives a tax credit to a particular company or industry, that recipient gains at the expense of everyone else.

Now here’s a worse idea: Fiddling with tax credit programs so that a larger percentage of available credits goes to companies that were located in Missouri to begin with (as opposed to out-of-state businesses that came here to get the tax break). If all companies in an industry have a chance at getting a tax credit, it’s possible that the most productive one will win it. It would still be a wasteful use of tax dollars, but the waste would at least be kept to a minimum. If, however, the tax credit program is rigged so that it favors preexisting Missouri companies, the state ends up picking a winner once, in singling out an industry for the subsidy, and then it makes yet another arbitrary choice based on location rather than merit. That compounds the inefficiency.

About the Author

Sarah Brodsky

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