Thursday, February 15, 2007
An Open Letter to Governor Granholm
February 9, 2007
I listened with great interest to your state of the State address. I was pleased to hear you talk of investment, as indeed, investment is the ONLY variable correlated with economic growth and development over time. I was also pleased to hear you talk of encouraging high-tech, high-innovation business creation, since the type of investment also matters greatly. In short, I believe you have identified the key areas for success.
Yet despite moving in the right direction, I wonder if you really grasp the seriousness of our current situation and the height of the obstacles facing us. Historically, former economic powerhouses that fall from the top rarely, if ever, regain their former position. Two things prevent a recovery. First, the government assumes the entire burden of change. And second, (ironically) the government doesn’t do enough to change entrenched institutions and vested interests that would encourage the private sector to invest.
My experience in the
Prioritize investment from a broad range of sources and in a broad range of activities. Your investment priorities, primarily in human capital, are too narrow and too state centric and ignore the importance of private-sector participation.
Refocus your economic plan on business creation rather than job creation. Focusing on jobs will lead you to make short-term decisions that may be detrimental to long-term growth. Focusing on jobs does not take into consideration externalities. In many cases the five person high-tech firm will be far better for our economic health in the long term than a 1,500 person transmission plant. I realize the latter is far better politically, but it is increasingly not better economically.
Emphasize and support entrepreneurialism and innovation. I applaud your willingness to "go anywhere and do anything" to bring businesses to
Focusing on entrepreneurship also addresses a problem not touched upon in your address. Although we certainly need to improve the level of education for
Next, quit playing the unfair trade card. While some of the accusations may be true, there is little we can do from a state perspective and, far more importantly, it matters very little for the industries of the new knowledge economy. This is also true for the criticism the political right often makes about labor, regulation, and taxation. All of these variables are far more important in the old economy than in the new and should be de-emphasized.
Now, that said, taxes are a direct incentive for industry. Fewer business taxes mean that more money can be invested. But it doesn’t guarantee that it will be. From my perspective, you should move as many of the taxes as possible to final consumption. Ideas for “service” taxes and “beer and soft drink” taxes for example, are an excellent way to generate income from consumption. Although we need consumption for our economic health, less consumption is not always bad, especially if the surplus is saved and invested. The key is to provide concomitant incentives to invest surplus. I would counsel you to lower business taxes while increasing consumer taxes and simultaneously providing incentives to invest surplus.
Finally, to return to our entrepreneurial roots will require significant reform of existing institutions. I mentioned above that regulation, labor, and taxes should be de-emphasized. But the institutions they have created should be dramatically reformed. Incentives that will help K-12 and university education cooperate with labor and business to improve skills, create knowledge, and then transfer and disseminate that knowledge will add to our competitive advantage.
Governor, I realize that the task ahead of our great state is a daunting one. But greatness never emerges in times of ease. I have been encouraged by the new direction you are taking and I hope you’ll make decisions that are more economically and socially correct than politically correct. But with challenge comes opportunity. As best exemplified by one of my favorite politicians, Harry Truman, now is the time to speak and do the right thing.
Sincerely,
Bryan K. Ritchie
Co-Director
Associate Professor, International Relations
(517) 353-8614
(517) 974-1353
ritchieb@msu.edu
www.msu.edu/~ritchieb
Labels: Economic Crisis Investment Innovation Michigan