Building an Economy that Works for Everyone

Corporate tax subsidies take up 15 cents of every public dollar spent in Washington

Recently, the New York Times released a database examining the incentives and subsidies corporations receive from various states. They identified 48 companies that have received more than $100 million in state grants since 2007, including companies with strong ties to Washington state such as Amazon ($348 million), Boeing ($338 million), Microsoft ($312 million), Weyerhauser ($406 million), and Orca Bay Seafoods ($296 million).

The Times’ database finds Washington state spends $2.35 billion per year on givebacks to corporations – or 15 cents of every dollar spent by the state. Per capita, that’s $349 for every person living in Washington state. By way of comparison, Washington state spent less than half that amount on operating costs at UW, WSU, CWU, EWU, CWU, and 34 Community and Technical colleges combined in 2012.

corp-tax-subsidies-12-4-12

The majority of these exemptions go to corporations engaged in manufacturing, agribusiness, aircraft, and high technology. The Times’ lists these business by name, as well as the amounts they received. Here are the top five recipients of public funds in Washington:

Amount Company Years
$305 million Microsoft 2004-2010
$296 million Orca Bay Seafoods 2006-2009
$128 million National Frozen Foods 2004-2008
$100 million Immunex Corp. 2004-2009
$72 million Andersen Dairy Inc. 2007-2009

Legislators should scrutinize tax exemptions as closely as they do every other budget item – which is not the current standard. Why, for example, did Washington state give nearly $450 million to seafood distributors from 2004-2009? If it was to stimulate economic growth and retain good jobs, the state should analyze that expense to ensure it provided a positive return on investment.

Tax preferences are a public expense, and should compete on an equal playing field with other public expenditures that create wealth, like education, health care, and infrastructure building. Once the value of a tax preference is established, legislators should weigh it against other public expenses and determine its value – just like every other item in the budget.

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