Biden’s War Against the South

Biden’s War Against the South
(David Mark/Pixabay)
Stephen Moore
11/3/2020
Updated:
11/3/2020
Commentary

Joe Biden has said he wants to be president of ALL the states and that he doesn’t see red states and blue states. But his economic policies are a de facto war against the high-growth red states of the South and the Sunbelt. We are talking about states such as Texas, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, and Arizona.

The central idea behind the Biden plan is to impose national policies on red states that have already crippled the blue states in America—particularly states such as New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Massachusetts. Instead of leveling the playing field by blue states getting smart and cutting red tape and taxes, the Biden idea is to force every state to have high taxes, union rules, expensive green energy policies, and onerous regulations.

Consider the avalanche of policies endorsed by Biden that crush red states and, in some cases, benefit blue states. Start with the Biden plan to abolish right-to-work laws in 26 states—mostly in the South, where every state is right-to-work. For the past 20 years at least, the right-to-work states have created twice as many jobs as the blue states as auto and steel factories, light manufacturing, and even tech firms have left the Northeast and Midwest and come to Dixie to avoid the unions. Now they would have to deal with unions in the South just as they do in the Rust Belt. This erodes the South’s competitive advantage.

The same goes for the Democrats’ $15-an-hour minimum wage. Blue states such as New York already have or are headed toward $15 wage requirements. They don’t need Washington to mandate it. But the South is a lower-wage and lower-cost of living region. Companies move there to cut costs. The lower unemployment rates in this region speak to the foolishness of very high minimum-wage laws. Under Biden, the lower-wage advantage of states such as Arkansas and Alabama disappears, and unemployment skyrockets.

Another priority for the Democrats and Biden is to eliminate the $10,000 cap on state and local tax deductions on federal tax forms. This is a massive tax giveaway to millionaires and billionaires in blue states with very high taxes. California, New York, and Illinois are, by far, the biggest winners here. The reason liberals in the Northeast are so insistent in bringing back this deduction is it allows these states to export 40 percent of their high taxes onto the backs of residents of low-tax states—most of which are in the South. Texas, Tennessee, and Florida have no income tax at all.

Biden’s plan to abolish oil and gas drilling would crush the economies of Texas, Oklahoma, West Virginia, and Louisiana, where energy production means millions of jobs.

Finally, there is the blue-state bailout that Biden supports. This would send some $400 billion a year to bankrupt states such as New York, Illinois, California, and New Jersey. They get most of the money because the funds are allocated to states with very high unemployment. But the feds can only give money to a state such as New York by taking it from the taxpayers in a state such as South Carolina. So, now, taxpayers in Tennessee have to pay for the mess in New York City, Chicago, and Philadelphia.

Add all this up and the cost to Southern states is more than $1.5 trillion over 10 years. It’s an enormous tax on red-state America.

The purpose is to handicap states such as Texas and Florida so they grow slower and blue states catch up. Meanwhile, about 3 million people have left New York, California, and Illinois over the past decade—packing up the trailers and heading south. Florida is gaining 1,000 people a day. Texas is getting nearly 600 of these blue-state refugees.

Residents of Southern states should rise up in protest against policies that will make the South look like New Jersey and Rhode Island. This makes as much sense as trying to make Hong Kong look like bankrupt Venezuela. But will the voters in Florida, North Carolina, Texas, and Arizona understand this before it is too late?

Stephen Moore is an economics journalist, author, and columnist. The latest of many books he co-authored is “Trumponomics: Inside the America First Plan to Revive Our Economy.” Currently, Moore is also the chief economist for the Institute for Economic Freedom and Opportunity.
The views expressed herein are solely those of the author. As a nonpartisan public charity, The Epoch Times does not endorse these statements and takes no position on political candidates.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, chief economist at FreedomWorks, and co-founder of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity. He served as a senior economic adviser to Donald Trump. His new book is titled “Govzilla: How the Relentless Growth of Government Is Impoverishing America.”
twitter
Related Topics