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Responding to many queries, Good Jobs First released its summary of state and local subsidies given to foreign-owned auto assembly plants, totaling $3.6 billion.
When Senate Republicans blocked the $14 billion emergency bridge loan needed to keep the nation’s auto industry operating, they knew it could cost between 3 million and 5 million jobs. But some of the most vociferous critics of the auto industry and the United Auto Workers (UAW) reside in states that have given huge no-strings-attached subsidies to foreign auto plants. Some of those states even owe their very survival in part to the Big Three auto companies. “As elected officials debate aid for the Big 3, taxpayers have the right to know the full extent of government involvement in America’s auto industry,” said Greg LeRoy, Good Jobs First (GJF) executive director. “And while proposed federal aid to the Big 3 would take the form of a loan, the vast majority of subsidies to foreign auto plants were taxpayer gifts such as property and sales tax exemptions, income tax credits, infrastructure aid, land discounts, and training grants,” he said. The largest subsidies include: Honda, Marysville, OH, 1980, $27 million* Nissan, Smyrna, TN, 1980, $233 million** Toyota, Georgetown, KY, 1985, $147 million Honda, Anna, OH, 1985, $27 million* Subaru, Lafayette, IN, 1986, $94 million Honda, East Liberty, OH, 1987, $27 million* BMW, Spartanburg, SC, 1992, $150 million Mercedes-Benz, Vance, AL, 1993, $258 million Toyota, Princeton, IN, 1995, $30 million Nissan, Decherd, TN, 1995, $200 million** Toyota, Buffalo, WV, 1996, more than $15 million Honda, Lincoln, AL, 1999, $248 million Nissan, Canton, MS, 2000, $295 million Toyota, Huntsville, AL, 2001, $30 million Hyundai, Montgomery, AL, 2002, $252 million Toyota, San Antonio, TX, 2003, $133 million Kia, West Point, GA, 2006, $400 million Honda, Greensburg, IN, 2006, $141 million Toyota, Blue Springs, MS, 2007, $300 million Volkswagen, Chattanooga, TN, 2008, $577 million
Total: more than $3.58 billion
List does not include joint ventures with U.S. companies. Good Jobs First reports that foreign-owned auto companies operating in the United States have received $3.6 billion in subsidies, mostly from southern “right to work” for less states. That amount doesn’t even count joint ventures with U.S. companies or include inflation, which would make the figures even higher in today’s dollars. Good Jobs First is a non-profit, non-partisan research center promoting best practices in economic development and smart growth, based in Washington, DC, with offices in New York and Chicago. Keep America Working, Buy Union Made |