Urban Neglect: Kansas City’s Misuse of Tax Increment Financing

Corporate Welfare |
By Michael Rathbone | Read Time 1 minute minutes

 

Usually when a private company considers undertaking a project, it weighs the current cost of that project against its future possible earnings, such as rent or sale prices. Sometimes, due to economic downturn or widespread poverty, entire regions are overlooked by private developers. As a result, governments have adopted a type of tax subsidy known as Tax Increment Financing (TIF), and it has become a common economic development tool throughout the United States. Kansas City is no exception.

In Kansas City, however, TIF is not being used to address legitimate blight or pervasive economic need. In fact, it appears to be used predominantly to subsidize private development in areas where there is little need for taxpayer subsidy, often rewarding politically connected developers instead.

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About the Author

Michael Rathbone was a policy researcher at the Show-Me Institute. He is a native of Saint Louis and a 2008 graduate of Saint Louis University, where he earned a bachelor of science degree in biomedical engineering. In 2010, Michael obtained an M.B.A. from Washington University in St. Louis with concentrations in finance and health care management. At the Show-Me Institute, Michaels policy areas included the state budget, taxes, public pensions, and public subsidies. He also delivered lectures to area high school students about the Great Depression from an economic perspective. Michael lives in Fenton.

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