One of the most important tax credits for business currently on the books is
the Manufacturers Investment Credit (MIC), which helps the industry offset the
cost of new equipment, enabling them to enlarge production, increase capacity
and create jobs. Remember also that the MIC has also allowed manufacturers
– small and large – to
offset a small portion of their expenses in a state where they endure operating
costs 32 percent higher than the national average.
In member surveys conducted by the California Manufacturers & Technology
Association, numerous companies have confirmed that not only has the MIC allowed
them to create more jobs, without it, those jobs would never have been created
in the first place.
Case in point: Santa Clara-based Intel Corporation points to the MIC as a key
reason for more than $1 billion investment in Silicon Valley. The company's D2
development fab has been upgraded and expanded twice since the MIC went into
effect, making it the largest and most advanced wafer fabrication plant in
Silicon Valley.
To those who think this tax credit has hurt our state, I suggest they tell it
first to the hardworking people who have a better life because the MIC enabled a
California company to grow and hire them.
But this makes little difference to anti-business critics, who shun these
real-world examples, and engage in divisive class and economic warfare. Their
view is this: If we have a budget deficit, a tax credit must be bad, because it
amounts to money that would otherwise go into state coffers.
This meager reasoning fails to account for what businesses all across
California do with capital they don’t have to send to Sacramento: they invest
it, borrow against it, purchase equipment with it, create jobs with it, and
ultimately generate more (and more reliable) state revenue.
Further, this “us against them” attitude towards the private sector pits
California against its business community, at which point we are truly at war
with ourselves.
Let’s pause for a moment to consider: The reason why our tax code contains a
home mortgage deduction is to encourage home ownership. The reason why our tax
code contains a deduction for dependent children is to ease the burden of
parents who are raising the leaders of tomorrow.
And the reason why our tax code contains certain deductions for certain
businesses is to encourage a better business climate so that more people will
have more and better jobs.
By the logic of the MIC’s critics, we should do away with all deductions.
Don’t they amount to money in people’s pockets that would otherwise go to public
coffers?
I will never understand how California’s professional sector
– which, hires, trains, insures and supports millions
of our people – came to be viewed as a drain on the
public treasury. But that’s an increasingly common view, and it is as dangerous
as it is misguided.
These are the facts: The average difference between a manufacturing job and a
service job is more than $25,000. And because the vast majority of service wage
jobs don’t exceed the state income tax threshold, they don’t produce a single
dollar in state income tax revenue.
With apologies to Gertrude Stein, state policy has frequently followed the
mantra “a job is a job is a job.” It’s high time we understood that the rapid
creation of service jobs – combined with the loss of
185,000 skilled manufacturing jobs since 2001– is not
disconnected from our economic plight.
As our manufacturing industry succeeds, it enlarges a high-skill, high-wage
workforce, including essential jobs for individuals entering the middle class.
Also, at a time when shipping costs are often the only difference to a customer
between a product manufactured in California or anywhere else, we have to
realize that manufacturing is and remains an industry at risk.
Can we rise above political rancor and give fair incentive to the industries
that have fired the engine of California’s greatness? Or will our leaders cave
in to special interest pressure that’s pushing a bad idea and even worse
economics?
State leaders must realize we’re in deep enough as it is. By rejecting the
MIC, they will be ignoring what to do when you find yourself in a hole, economic
or otherwise: Stop digging.