Gov. Tony Evers should renegotiate
Wisconsin’s contract with Taiwan’s electronics giant, Foxconn. Foxconn
has repeatedly changed the terms of the original deal. Our governor and
legislative leaders have a responsibility to respond by protecting the
interests of Wisconsin.
It
has been more than two years since Gov. Scott Walker negotiated the
largest taxpayer-funded state subsidy to a foreign corporation in U.S.
history. While Wisconsin and Mount Pleasant have lived up to the terms
of the agreement, investing close to $1 billion and evicting local
homeowners, Foxconn has not.
Foxconn
contracted to invest $10 billion in a massive liquid crystal display
Gen 10.5 plant, employing 13,000 manufacturing workers at an average
salary of $35,000.
Let’s review the firm's broken promises:
• Foxconn failed to meet its first-year employment target.
• Projected investment has plummeted from $10 billion to $2 or $3 billion.
• Instead of hiring manufacturing workers, Foxconn now claims most of the employees will be engineers.
•
It now plans a much smaller Gen 6 plant, thus no vaunted multiplier
effects from glass screens needed for the originally proposed Gen 10.5
facility.
None of this is
surprising. Foxconn is notorious for promising massive job creation
developments only to later renege on its promises. From Pennsylvania to
Vietnam, from Brazil to Mount Pleasant, Foxconn hasn’t lived up to
investment and employment promises.
It
is clear that Walker’s rush to secure this deal was motivated by his
failure to meet his first campaign’s failed promise to create 250,000
private-sector jobs by 2014. Following his short-lived presidential run,
Walker needed something to revive his brand. “Wisconn Valley,” as he
labeled it, was a politically expedient stunt, and one that President
Donald Trump also championed in hopes of keeping Wisconsin in his
electoral camp with a promise to bring back manufacturing.
Foxconn
CEO Terry Gou's actions were also politically motivated. He was
justifiably concerned about the impact of Trump’s trade war with China
on his firm’s profits. Promising a massive U.S. investment appeared an
effective way to appease Trump. It didn’t hurt that the president's
then-chief of staff, Reince Priebus, and then-House Speaker Paul Ryan,
had strong ties to Mount Pleasant. The bill for this Republican
boondoggle was offloaded onto Wisconsin taxpayers, K-12 students, higher
education students, the environment and Mount Pleasant-area homeowners.
Since Foxconn has changed its plans,
it would be irresponsible to let the contract stand unchanged. No bank
would loan you money to build a restaurant and then let you keep the
cash to only open an ice cream push-cart instead.
What should the state ask for?
1.
The state agreed to pay 17 cents on the dollar for job creation, 70
percent more than the 10 cents Wisconsin normally provides. This was
presumably justified because of the scale of the Foxconn investment. Now
that it is scaled back, so should the state’s commitment.
Read more: https://madison.com/ct/opinion/column/michael-rosen-and-jeffrey-sommers-wisconsin-should-renegotiate-its-foxconn/article_78c5ef1d-e5b8-5ba0-900c-3c62b7eb4af0.html
Read more: https://madison.com/ct/opinion/column/michael-rosen-and-jeffrey-sommers-wisconsin-should-renegotiate-its-foxconn/article_78c5ef1d-e5b8-5ba0-900c-3c62b7eb4af0.html
1 comment:
The Contract is in DEFAULT.
Foxconn wants to renegotiate.
Why Should WI Taxpayers continue to be raped?
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