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Campaign about Jobs Gives Way to Hard Reality of Creating Jobs

  
  
  

The long campaign about jobs and the economy in Massachusetts is finally over and now gives way to the cold reality about jobs and the economy in Massachusetts.

Governor PatrickIncumbent Governor Deval Patrick defied the national Republican tidal wave to win a second term at the helm of a commonwealth still seeking a post-recession economic identity. Massachusetts voters also retained overwhelming Democratic majorities in both House and Senate on Beacon Hill, sent a blue delegation to a newly red Congress and defeated a proposal to reduce the state sales tax by more than half.

The Massachusetts that Governor Patrick surveys as he savors his accomplishment this evening is a paradox - stronger economically and with many more growth assets than other states, yet fragile in its ability to deliver on the promise of opportunity to all the citizens of the commonwealth.

The commonwealth enjoys a lower unemployment rate at 8.4 percent than the nation as a whole and the $2.5 billion state budget deficit pales in comparison with the fiscal disaster in California. But the 292,300 jobless people in Massachusetts and thousands of employers struggling to hold onto their businesses are anything but sanguine about what the future holds.

The challenges facing the governor and other policymakers seeking to promote economic growth are sobering – soaring health insurance premiums, a looming 40 percent increase in average unemployment insurance rates, high electricity costs, tight commercial credit markets, consumer uncertainty and a state regulatory system that discourages innovation while creating little public benefit. Underlying many of these challenges is a pervasive sense among employers – many of whom expressed the opinion at AIM’s recent regional policy briefings – that neither policymakers nor the general public really appreciate the complexity and risk of running a business in Massachusetts.

Massachusetts employers have solutions to offer and look forward to participating in the debate on the future of the Massachusetts economy. Associated Industries of Massachusetts represents thousands of employers who stand for jobs, economic opportunity, fiscal responsibility, business formation and a government that acknowledges that the private sector has the unique ability and responsibility to create the common wealth for the people of Massachusetts.

We look forward to working with the governor, the Legislature and the Congressional delegation to build support for several key principles of economic recovery:

  • A uniformly favorable environment for business development across all industries and all regions of the commonwealth.
  • Economic policy that balances key public investments with a competitive cost structure that keeps jobs in Massachusetts.
  • Predictable, responsible and long-term state fiscal policy.
  • Well-conceived and collaborative regulation that creates measurable benefits. 
  • A nimble, world-class education system that provides opportunity for all Massachusetts citizens and the knowledge base for economic growth.
  • Collaboration between business and government to ensure mutual success.

These principles will provide the foundation for a sustainable recovery that touches every sector of the diverse Massachusetts economy, from manufacturing to high technology to retail and hospitality. Successful economic policy creates uniform benefit throughout the marketplace, balancing the need to invest in the future without simultaneously harming the industries of the present that employ the vast majority of Massachusetts residents.  

We look forward to the challenge.

Comments

It’s encouraging that Massachusetts stands out as the bellwether of smart politics and does not circum to political change for change sake. It’s the people we elect to represent us not the party that is important.  
 
I have confidence that the people we elected will represent the commonwealth well.
Posted @ Wednesday, November 03, 2010 6:35 AM by John
Unfortunately, the Massachusetts message is (still) that the Democratic political machine is more powerful than the qualifications of individual candidates. The previous comment is correct about "bellwether of smart politics." However, that does not make it the bellwether of smart government. If anyone believes that in every single statewide and congressional race the Democrat was the better/best candidate, they are sadly mistaken.
Posted @ Wednesday, November 03, 2010 7:37 AM by Jim Long
Jobs will never come from government. You need new ideas and innovations. That comes from the private sector. 
 
This group in San Francisco has three big ideas that can renew America and they are breakthroughs. The Intro made me feel better about our future: http://www.2020b.com
Posted @ Wednesday, November 03, 2010 11:32 PM by Alex White
You fail to mention burdensome income, sales and property taxes in the Commonwealth among your list of challenges facing us in striving for economic growth. AIM's position in support of the draconian 25% increase in sales taxes (Ballot Question 3) was puzzling to say the least. The sales tax increase during the height of the recession removed hundreds of millions of dollars from the pockets of consumers, dampening consumer demand and prospects for revenue growth particularly for retailers and restaurants. The failure to understand the adverse effect on economic growth of the high tax burden imposed by the poliicians on Beacon Hill who are largely lawyers with little or no business sense is not surprising, but the position adopted by AIM, the pre-eminent organization representing the business community, on Question 3 was bafffling. Hopefully, AIM will begin to attempt to educate the Governor and his Democratic friends in the Legislature that significantly reducing taxes and wasteful government spending (on extravagant public service pensions and health care benefits, for example) is the best way to achieve economic growth and higher employment in the Commonwealth.
Posted @ Thursday, November 04, 2010 7:53 AM by Robert Ventura
The Massachusetts election results show that special interests still rule the roost on Beacon Hill. That A.I.M. did not support the sales tax rollback, and counter the establishment’s scare tactics, is not encouraging to those of us seeking dynamic change. The bitter defeat of this rollback measure sends the wrong message. It tells the politicians that we have not yet reached our limit for taxation – that there is still more to be wrung out of the sponge. “It’s OK, Mr. Politician; we’re not tapped out just yet!” 
 
 
 
What a lesson that would have taught, had it passed? They would have learned that scare tactics and smooth talk no longer work. It would have put the power back into the hands of the people. But that is just a pipe dream now. And it’s not a far reach to anticipate a sales tax of 7% in the not too distant future, or a graduated income tax, or a boost of the gasoline tax. Cutting spending does not come to their attention until they run out of ways to “enhance revenue”. 
 
 
 
This recent election tells us we have passed the tipping point, where the majority of the electorate has become ever more dependent on the largesse of big government – either for public jobs, pensions, so-called “entitlements”, benefit mandates and/or generous unemployment checks, which just keep coming and coming.  
 
 
 
Once this tipping point is passed, it becomes more and more difficult to retrench, as sanity by fiscal restraint is outweighed by the increasing plurality of those who benefit from bloated government spending. A new class is evolving now, forever beholden to those they elect to public office with their tax and spend baggage. We witness this phenomenon in places like debt-ridden California and Connecticut – both far beyond the tipping point in the evolution toward insolvency – where liberal spenders are re-elected again and again. They say the first sign of flagging sanity is when one expects different results while repeating the same thing over and over. California is in debt for $130 billion, with an unfunded pension liability of $500 billion. Still, they continue to elect documented spendthrifts to high office. 
 
 
 
To stop this tide, it takes a charismatic leader, such as Ronald Reagan or New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, with an attitude of “damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!” Massachusetts is not, and will not in the foreseeable future, be so fortunately blessed. Business, or lack of it, will go on as usual. For Taxachusetts politicians, the “solution” remains, as it always has been, to tax more and spend more. This has become the natural thing to do – sort of a knee-jerk reaction that can always be depended on to solve any problem. 
 
 
 
A.I.M.’s goals make good copy, but wishful thinking is no substitute for bold action. 
 
Posted @ Friday, November 05, 2010 12:45 PM by Ralph Wilbur
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