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Faraday deal is government picking winners and losers, anointing small businesses as the losers

Nevada Policy Staff
| December 21, 2015

LAS VEGAS — Responding to news that Gov. Sandoval and lawmakers approved a series of tax breaks and subsidies for Faraday Future during a special session late last week, Nevada Policy Research Institute Communications Director Michael Schaus released the following statement:

The approval of more than $300 million of transferable tax credits, abatements and handouts to Faraday Futures is just the latest example of state politicians trying to pick winners and losers.

Just months ago, Nevada lawmakers imposed the largest tax increase in state history. Then, last week, they went out of their way to give hefty handouts to a politically connected electric-car company with no real-world record.

Yes, low taxes and “incentives” can attract new businesses to a state — but what message is being given to job creators, entrepreneurs and small businesses already operating in Nevada? Where are their tax incentives? In contrast to Faraday, Nevada’s job creators will be laboring under a slew of burdensome new taxes.

The 4,500 new jobs Faraday promises to create — a number less than one-third of what Nevada’s small businesses create every year, according to the Small Business Administration — sounds impressive in a news conference, but such projections are far from guaranteed.

Recall the similar rose-colored projections from the Sandoval administration when Tesla promised to create 700 jobs in 2015 as part of their new Gigafactory. So far, only a paltry 24 positions have been created, despite the substantial tax breaks provided to the new facility.

Politicians promising jobs and entrepreneurs actually creating jobs are obviously two very different things.

Genuine across-the-board incentives, such as lower taxes on current Nevada taxpayers and job creators, would do much more to spark economic growth than channeling hundreds of millions of dollars to secretive, unproven electric-car companies.

As we’ve seen too many times already, it’s the average taxpayer who loses when politicians in government attempt to play God with the economy.
 

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Michael Schaus is communications director of the Nevada Policy Research Institute, a nonpartisan, free-market think tank. For more visit http://npri.org.

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