Do Tax Breaks For Data Centers Make Sense? (datacenterfrontier.com)
1sockchuck writes: Does it make sense for state to offer tax incentives to lure huge data center projects? After an extended debate, legislators in Michigan have approved tax breaks for a $5 billion data center in Grand Rapids. The project from Switch, which previously built the SuperNAP in Las Vegas, brought the debate into stark relief due to the size of the project — an estimated 2 million square feet of data center space. States competing for projects often find themselves in a bind, since the highly-automated facilities create a limited number of permanent jobs, but many states already offer juicy incentives. Michigan ultimately sought a middle path, tying the tax breaks to job creation goals. If the data center jobs don't materialize, the breaks disappear.
It's rather obvious - the tax code should be simple. Without tax breaks for special interest groups.
The hodgepodge of tax breaks for this and that makes the tax code unfair, complicated, and leads to a race to the bottom between states, attempting to claw in industry by offering them the best deal.
American states should unify in some sort of federation, with a common, unified and simplified tax code - which should get rid of every single tax break on offer.