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Monday, November 28, 2005
Ohio to Allow State Investments in
Private Firms
By Judy Johnson
People's Weekly World
CLEVELAND — Hold onto your hats! Ohio’s
recently passed Issue 1 could mean a lot of different things. Only time
will tell exactly what Ohio voters did on Nov. 8. But voters across the
country would be well-advised to study these developments carefully, as
similar proposals are bound to show up in other states in future
elections. Try not to fall asleep as you need on, as the issues are a
little complex.
In the Nov. 8 election Ohio voters passed the ballot initiative known as
Issue 1, a constitutional amendment allowing the state of Ohio, its state
universities and local governments to become shareholders in private
companies and to share in any resulting financial gains. The amendment
also allows the issuance of general obligation bonds to directly aid
industry, up to $500 million over 10 years.
The amendment overrules prohibitions against the state government or any
local government investing public money in private companies, a
prohibition that has been in place in Ohio for over 150 years. The
amendment makes “public purposes” out of local government public
infrastructure, financial support for research and development and the
development of sites and facilities in Ohio that support industry and
commerce.
The amendment included support for Gov. Bob Taft’s “Third Frontier”
program, which was defeated by voters in 2003. It is widely believed that
the amendment passed this time because it coupled a bond program for
meeting infrastructure needs with money that, supporters argued, will
stimulate research and development. According to these supporters, this
could mean the creation of up to 96,000 jobs, earning roughly $55,000 per
year. Ohio has been ravaged over the last four years by the loss of at
least 200,000 good-paying manufacturing jobs.
The amendment was supported by business, labor, politicians, and many
other groups, and it passed with 63 percent in favor, 36 percent opposed.
In a cautionary note, Policy Matters Ohio, a nonpartisan think tank which
took no position on the issue, warned that the state will be obligated to
meet its payments to bondholders no matter what the financial state of the
state. “The risk of general obligation debt is that debt service will
crowd out discretionary programs in difficult financial times,” said the
Policy Matters report. Interest payments would equal more than one out of
every four dollars of debt service over the life of the program.
Concern about the new, close relationship between public and private
funding was voiced by former Ohio state Rep. Bill Schuck. Shuck stated:
“If some private companies in which the state and local governments invest
grow and become profitable, public budgets will increasingly depend on
direct corporate earnings rather than taxes. This is bound to change how
government officials think and act.” Jon Honeck, author of the Policy
Matters report, said, “A closer relationship between public and private
interests in economic development policy will be the enduring legacy of
the amendment.” The Ohio League of Women Voters supported Issue 1, with
Linda Lalley, the group’s co-president, stating, “While we have lingering
concerns about expanding ‘public purpose’ to include private-sector
recipients, we are willing to risk it with this proposal to improve the
economy.”
Schuck, in his analysis, asked: “If a government agency’s budget depends
on corporate dividends, how willing will it be to impose environmental
controls on, seek taxes from, or examine the labor practices of the
company?” The examples one could cite are endless. “If,” he asks, “a local
government invests in a local company, and the company’s stock ought to be
sold or its management replaced, what will a county commissioner, township
trustee, or mayor do when that action is opposed by managers who are
community leaders or by a large number of employees who are voters?”
The president of Public Citizen, Joan Claybrook, was even more sharply
critical, telling the Cincinnati Enquirer, “Government normally oversees
and regulates industry. Here they’re integrated into one.” Bill Allison of
the Center for Public Integrity told the same newspaper, “Government
should not be in the business of picking stocks.”
According to the Ohio Committee on Corporations, Law and Democracy, the
new amendment is very similar to a law passed in 1837, which allowed
direct investment of public funds in private corporations. The state went
into deep debt. The law was repealed in 1842, and a constitutional
amendment was passed in 1851 prohibiting joint ownership or direct
investment of public funds in private corporations. This constitutional
prohibition has been in place ever since.
According to the Policy Matters Ohio report, “Whether the public sector
uses its expanded authority successfully will depend on the vigilance of
the Legislature and the appropriate state agencies in defining and
tracking the public interest in economic development policy.”
Needless to say, public vigilance will be required to carefully watchdog
and be ready to take action if the use of public monies turns out to
primarily benefit private industry at the expense of the public good.
The new amendment also contains a requirement missing from the failed 2003
amendment that all of Ohio’s regions receive benefits, and that the state
provide access to the program by economically and socially disadvantaged
individuals and businesses.
People's Weekly World 11/28/2005
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