Culture

There goes another Seattle startup!

The sad tale of how Crosscut has been lured overseas, and how helpless this country was to ward off this terrible loss.

There goes another Seattle startup!
Sponsorship

by

Ashli Blow

The sad tale of how Crosscut has been lured overseas, and how helpless this country was to ward off this terrible loss.

The trade deficit has become a topic of conversation for the first time  since 1773. What is lost in the discussion is the severe competition for foreign  direct investment (FDI). Almost every country in the world has a national agency  with significant resources and overseas office to attract investment. The  United States has three  individuals at the U.S. Commerce Department in Washington, D.C., armed with a website and glossy brochures. This is the U.S. version of “A  League of Our Own” and a poster child for American smugness.

To show the  interrelationship between trade and investment, I will use a well known  Seattle area  example, telling a story which, for obvious reasons, Crosscut has not been willing to publicize.

Crosscut Public Media, led by a notorious Seattle robber baron named David Brewster, is considering moving its  headquarters. Online news is but a public front for a vast multi-million-dollar  empire including a $40 million measuring device manufacturing plant  located in Republic, Washington and a brewery in England. The  measuring devices are used in legislative bodies to test the level of hot air  and to alert people if the temperature reaches dangerous levels. (The website, Crosscut.com, is used to drive the amount of hot air up and down, as a way of showing off the device's quick-trigger responses.)

Naturally Crosscut is wondering: Where is the  best deal available? What city in the world will offer the best incentive  package to relocate the technology company and the band of ruffians that are employed?

Crosscut is considered a plum for business-attraction agencies.  Every country in the world has an investment attraction agency that combs our  country looking to bring jobs to their country, states, and cities. Many have  offices in various regions of the United States to be better able to  work the prospective clients. The goal is jobs and economic activity. It does  not take a complete relocation of the corporate headquarters. The robber baron  can still live on Lake Washington awaiting a  sunny day to sit outside. The desire is to get the multitude of worker bees, the  Steve Dunphys and Jordan Royers, to either relocate or to open new positions for  local talent to write stories and make the high tech devices.

“Invest in Australia” was the first agency to  approach Crosscut. This agency is the top layer of a systemic approach to  attracting investment. The agency works with state-level agencies such as "Invest  in Victoria" or "Invest in New South Wales," and these in turn work with the cities  such as Melbourne or Sydney. The Australia organization recognizes  they have a system of government with national, state, and local governments. Each  level has assistance to offer and they work together as a team. They cooperate  to compete.

What happens to the American trade position if Australia is successful and Crosscut relocates to  Alice Springs?

Let’s say Crosscut currently ships half its product around the  US and half overseas. If production  is moved to Australia, an  export becomes an import and an American export is lost to Australia. Our  trade deficit deteriorates because of investment attraction. We gain an import  and lose an export. Steve Dunphy becomes Crocodile Dunphee and has to do  stories on the Outback Conservancy.

Seattle’s Sister City  in Korea offers even more incentives.  Daejeon is a city at the junction of two rivers with bike and jogging paths  along both. It is 10 miles from a national park with mountain hiking and 15  miles from one of the historic centers of Korea. It is 50  minutes from Seoul on high speed rail. It is a nice  place.

Daejeon is also the center of Korean science and research. It has the  Korean MIT as well as a national university. It has the national science museum  and over 20 national research centers. These include national research centers  for cancer (which partners with the Hutch), defense, aerospace, electronics,  geology, and maritime. What can Daejeon offer Crosscut?

Daejeon’s guide begins with these words: “Foreign-invested firms or R&D centers  investing in FTZs will be exempted from national and local tax in accordance  with the Foreign Investment Promotion Act, the Special Treatment Control Act, and  the City’s Ordinance on the Foreign Investment Promotion.” The incentives  include waiver of the national income tax and local taxes if the investment is  over $30 million, and lease incentives. If the investment employs over 20 citizens  there are subsidies. If it is an R&D center, up to 80 percent of the salaries can  be paid with a dollar lid. Finally, cash grants can be given in certain  circumstances. Daejeon has a one-stop shop for foreign investors. Daejeon has an   excellent guide, “Living in Daejeon” a guide for foreign residents, And yes, there is a COSTCO store.

Andalusia, Spain a few years ago presented its  ability to put in the infrastructure and build your building. As with other examples  from around the world and as with the New York Yankees, signing  bonuses are extensive.

A number of years ago a delegation from Taiwan was visiting Seattle. They were promoting investing in five key  industries in Taiwan including IT and new  materials. A member of the audience asked a question of the speaker: What are  the impact fees in Taiwan? The speaker said he did not  know what this was. We in the audience did because of the issues with Boeing  when they expanded Paine Field for the 777 production.

The questioner then described  the charging of the company for infrastructure. Again the Taiwanese speaker look perplexed  and discussed the question with his colleagues. He then said he understood. Yes he said, if you invested in the five industries they would build the  roads, put in the sewers, and make any necessary infrastructure investment to  make your investment work.

The Greater Seattle region is working to enhance the attraction of  investment that creates jobs here. The Trade Alliance is promoting the region to  international markets. The development agencies such as Enterprise Seattle,  Tacoma-Pierce County Economic Development Board, and the Economic Development  Council of Snohomish County can assist with showing people around. The State’s  Department of Commerce has three people (if they survive the budget cuts). And yes,  the US Commerce Department has two people and a great website, “Invest in  America.”

That's pretty puny. As with trade, tourism, and  the other components of international competition, we have not confronted the  new realities. We still compete with the pre-1905 flying wedge while our  opponents use an innovation called the forward pass.

Where is Crosscut moving? The winner turns out to be  Bordeaux, France, which won the high-tech business when "Invest in France" offered a  location next to a wine bar and unlimited access for 10 years. Au revoir!

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal