Study: State “Business Climate” Rankings Based on Flawed Data, Have No Policy Value

May 30, 2015
30/04/2013

Washington, DC, May 1, 2013—Prominent studies that purport to measure and rank the states’ ā€œbusiness climatesā€ are actually politicized grab-bags of data. They have no predictive value and should not be used to inform public policies.

Those are the main conclusions of a new study published today by Good Jobs First. ā€œGrading Places: What Do the Business Climate Rankings Really Tell Us?ā€ is authored by Dr. Peter Fisher, an economist who has written extensively on economic development.

ā€œWhen we scrutinized the business climate methodologies, we found profound and elementary errors,ā€ said Fisher. ā€œWe found effects presented as causes. We found factors that have no empirically proven relationship to economic growth. And we found scores that ignore major differences among state tax systems.

ā€œGiven these underlying flaws, it is no surprise that the rankings wildly contradict each other and fail to predict which states’ economies will thrive,ā€ concluded Fisher. ā€œInstead, we note that the factors often have to do with the advocacy agendas of the groups.ā€

The study was released today at a national tele-press conference and is available at

http://www.goodjobsfirst.

It examines: the Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council’s

U.S. Business Policy Index;

the Tax Foundation’s

State Business Tax Climate Index;

the American Legislative Exchange Council’s

Rich States, Poor States: the ALEC-Laffer Economic Competitiveness Index;

and the Beacon Hill Institute’s


State Competitiveness Report

.Ā  A

lso examined are two representative firm models: the Council on State Taxation’s

Competitiveness of State and Local Business Taxes on New Investment

,


prepared by the accounting firm Ernst & Young, and the Tax Foundation’s

Location Matters

, prepared with the accounting firm KPMG.

ā€œOur study does not try to correct these rankings or present a new rating,ā€ said Greg LeRoy, executive director of Good Jobs First. ā€œIndeed, that is one of our main points: the needs of different businesses and facilities vary so much—and conditions vary so much between metro areas even in the same state—that the whole concept of a state ā€˜business climate’ is nonsensical. For only the third time in 27 years, the pseudo-social science of ā€˜business climate’ ratings has been debunked. We should lay aside these useless reports and debate the real issue: how to build a tax system that is fair, modern and relevant.ā€

Good Jobs First is a non-profit, non-partisan resource center promoting accountability in economic development. Founded 15 years ago and headquartered in Washington, it includes Good Jobs New York.

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