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Special Report

Show-Me State Blues

How unlucky for the state of Missouri that it can’t join the Southeastern Conference too. 

Consider two teams on divergent paths — the Missouri Tigers and the Missouri Widgets.

Clearly, the football Tigers are on the rise — coming off seven consecutive winning seasons. This fall, they will join the “best football conference on the planet” — namely, the SEC, or Southeastern Conference, which has produced the last six national college champions.

Just as clearly, the other team — to which all of us who live and work in Missouri belong — is in a state of serious and prolonged decline.

The Widgets compete in what we will call the Great Midwestern Conference, consisting of Missouri and the eight neighboring states. As recently as 1995, Missouri ranked third in this conference in per capita income — the best measure of relative prosperity. Now we are down in fifth place — behind Illinois, Kansas, Nebraska, and Iowa. On current trends we are in danger of falling into last place — behind Oklahoma, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Arkansas.

Over the 14-year period from 1997 through 2010, Missouri was the slowest-growing state in the region. It ranked dead last in GDP growth (i.e., growth in annual output of goods and services). It also lagged behind all but one other Midwestern state (Illinois) in growth of employment.

In reality, the Great Midwestern Conference is not all that great in terms of economic performance. Between 1997 and 2010, the growth in output for the U.S. economy as a whole was 33 percent. None of the nine Midwestern states matched or exceeded that, but three (Nebraska, Iowa, and Oklahoma) came close at 32 percent, and another three were not far off the pace, with Arkansas and Kansas both at 29 percent and Tennessee at 25 percent.

The three obvious laggards within the conference in terms of their overall growth over the 14 years were Illinois at 19 percent, Kentucky at 17 percent, and Missouri at 14 percent. How bad was Missouri’s performance from a national perspective? The state ranked 48th out of the 50 states in GDP growth, ahead of only Ohio and Michigan, down at 7 and 1 percent, respectively.

What ails Missouri?

In our judgment, two factors merit close attention and study.

First is the continued allegiance of Missouri lawmakers to a faulty set of policy prescriptions in trying to pick economic winners and losers. Second is the failure to implement serious tax reforms to improve Missouri’s competitiveness.

Show-Me Institute policy analysts and scholars have documented numerous instances of how the generous (or, to be more accurate, the wasteful) use of state tax credits for targeted commercial developments has failed to produce promised results.

In recent years, Missouri has issued hundreds of millions of dollars in new tax credits on an annual basis, and the bill for those tax credits has grown alarmingly. In fiscal year 2013, Missouri expects state tax credit redemptions to cost the state roughly $866 million in lost revenues. That is more money than the state spends from general revenues on prisons and public safety.

With the money that would be saved from eliminating costly and unproductive state tax credits, our state could reduce or eliminate the corporate income tax — benefitting not just a few favored businesses, but companies across the state, along with others that might want to move here.

All the evidence points to the conclusion that businesses migrate to (and continue to invest and flourish within) locations that do not waste taxpayer money in trying to pick winners and losers… and concentrate instead on maintaining a favorable environment for all businesses.

About the Author

Andrew B. Wilson, a frequent contributor to The American Spectator, writes from St. Louis.

About the Author

Joseph Haslag is chief economist at the Show-Me Institute, which promotes market solutions for Missouri public policy.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (6) |

jaytrain| 6.20.12 @ 8:30AM

The key to winning in the SEC is recruiting and the same holds for your Widget league . And the key to recruiting is Right to Work labor law . Every state in the SEC is a RTW state and Mzziou ain't goin' nowhere without that . Why should any sane busness leader get in bed with the thugs from the IAM UAW or Teamsters , I ask you ?But we sure do appreciate y'all joining our football league , gives us kinda a bye week to tune up for a real game . Roll Tide Roll !!

Dolor en el trasero| 6.20.12 @ 9:21AM

I did some business with a company in Missouri. While not as bad as California regarding taxes and regulations, they still are flying on the Liberal Socialist flight plan! Accordingly, they all going to suffer the economic pains as a result of Liberal Socialism in their state. It's much easier to deal with companies in the deep South and now, Wisconsin, Ohio (somewhat better) and Indiana are great. I never deal with anyone from Illinois. Too much state regulation and compliance requirements.

Occam's Tool| 6.20.12 @ 5:24PM

Bama is pretty awesome--in football and economic climate. I just hate the tornadoes and the summer heat. But I am looking forward to seeing the Tigers fall to the Tide (both Auburn and Mizzou).

fmm| 6.20.12 @ 9:52AM

Seems to be the standard plight for blue states.

Petronius| 6.20.12 @ 3:01PM

Between the usual business, government, and union incestuous relationships, add the collective pig headed ignorance, indolence, and mandatory hiring of the incompetent in this state's labor market. Racketeering is a shadow of what it was when union workers were forced to kick back to their local officers to keep their jobs. The Steamfitter goons are gone, but the concrete mafia and corn farmers plundering our wallets via gas taxes and contracts in the Statehouse Sucks. People adore the Carnahan family who are so adept at getting in on the fixes. Earning a living is scorned as the unfortunate lot of those who are unconnected. Missouri is totally controlled by hierarchies ranging from the Civic Progress/RCGA conclave pontificating from the Bogey Club, to the MFO forcing their corn into our tanks, to satraps in KC. And the major universities are worse than these poly-ticks. Those refusing to jump through their hoops and grovel at their approval altars are taxed and forced to pay them anyway for Nothing. I can't wait for football season in Columbia when the alumnae find out SEC rules will spoil their tailgate parties.
Honest working people who are not agreeable and corrupt are not welcome. I learned that the day I was told to leave the Republican Party with these words uttered by a sitting State Senator. "There aren't enough people like you to elect anybody to anything." Show Me really is a misnomer.

MyAngle| 6.21.12 @ 11:57PM

My heart belongs to MO! May she find her way back to her roots of cynicism and self-reliance.

More Articles by Andrew B. Wilson

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http://spectator.org/archives/2012/06/20/show-me-state-blues

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