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Southern states team to lure
business: Alabama is enlisting Florida and Mississippi
to help it bring a $2.9 billion German steel mill to
Mobile
By Patrik Jonsson
ATLANTA
Alabama Gov. Bob Riley and Mississippi
Gov. Haley Barbour both understand how the game has
been played. In the past, they've battled each other
tooth and nail, using Fort Knox-size economic incentives
to attract truck manufacturing and Internet server farms
in a bid to help their own states climb out of America's
economic basement.
Today, former rivals Riley and Barbour,
both Republicans, as well as Florida Gov. Charlie Crist
(R), are working together.
Their coalition, cobbled together by Governor
Riley, hopes to lure a $2.9 billion German steel mill
to Mobile, Ala. The plant, shopped around by German
company ThyssenKrupp, would employ 2,700 people. Mississippi
and Florida are helping Alabama because 30 percent of
the jobs would go to Mississippians and Floridians.
Although the alliance serves a self-interest
for the states involved, some experts predict it is
part of a gradual tilt toward broader economic regionalism,
especially in the South. Such partnerships could relax
states' competition for corporate business, increase
cooperation, and ease what some critics see as a lack
of confidence that causes Southern states to overcompensate
to win industry favor.
[Southern states] "have built incentive
packages out the wazoo ... but they're insufficient,"
says Pete Whalley, an economic development expert at
the University Research Center in Jackson, Miss. "Market
forces don't care about state lines, so we don't need
to think about boundaries anymore."
Economic regionalism was first touted
in 1988 by then-Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton and the governors
of Louisiana and Mississippi, who shook hands on a barge
in the middle of the Mississippi River to start the
Delta Regional Authority. This multistate approach has
slowly been taking hold in other parts of Dixie.
In Mississippi, 18 counties in the deepest
Delta are laying aside their singular interests to pool
resources together to attract businesses. To the chagrin
of Marion, Ark., and Chattanooga, Tenn., the announcement
last week in Tupelo that Mississippi had won the bid
for a new Toyota plant may have hinged in part on quiet
lobbying from the state of Alabama on behalf of its
neighbor. After all, Huntsville, Ala., is within commuting
distance of Tupelo.
Riley broached the topic of an alliance
to win the steel plant at the recent winter meeting
of the National Governors Association in Washington.
Later he caught up with Governors Barbour and Crist
again, this time with pen in hand. They drafted a letter
in support of the plant and vowed to work as a team
on behalf of ThyssenKrupp, both in the South and in
Washington. A decision from the company is expected
in the next two months.
"Partisanship brings it together,
and shared self-interest makes it work," says David
Lanoue, chair of the University of Alabama's political
science department in Tuscaloosa.
It could spell bad news for Louisiana
Gov. Kathleen Blanco (D), who is also vying to lure
ThyssenKrupp. Her state is offering a $300 million incentive
package.
Competition among states means that corporations
can still call many of the shots. North and South Carolina
fought hard for a secretive project, which turned out
to be a 210-employee Google server station. North Carolina
won in January by offering tax breaks that amounted
to a record $1 million per job gained.
"Southern states have stirred themselves
into a sense of desperation when they shouldn't be desperate,"
argues Chad Adams of the libertarian John Locke Foundation
in Raleigh, N.C.
"It's tricky for poor states,"
says William Stewart, professor emeritus of political
science at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa.
"[Incentives] involve a sense that we're not smart
enough or we don't have enough infrastructure to get
this industry otherwise, so we give away as many freebies
as we can come up with. On the other hand, most people
feel [such incentives have] been a plus."
The problem for critics of incentives
is that they seem to work. Alabama, for example, paid
$166,000 per job in 1993 to land a Mercedes Benz plant
outside Birmingham. At least partly as a result, Alabama's
economy sprinted forward. It now has the 15th-fastest
growing GDP among the states, up from No. 30 in 2004.
To land a plant in 2000, Mississippi gave Nissan a $700
million incentives package. Mississippi's GDP has gone
from $68 billion in 2002 to $81 billion in 2005.
"What's happening now ... is we're
replacing $30,000 a year jobs with $60,000 a year jobs,
and that's how you change not just quality of life,
but the culture of life, where people can buy a bass
boat where they couldn't before," says Alabama
state Sen. Roger Bedford (D).
More broadly, Mr. Whalley says, the state-eat-state
model is becoming outdated as Americans face increasing
competition from countries such as China.
"I think we're going to see
a lot more of these [regional agreements] as we go forward,"
he says.
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