Asking the Right Questions

Occasionally, the spirit of sweetness and light descends upon me, briefly dispelling my jaundiced view of the state legislature. Most recently, I found myself nodding with approval when reading about a study by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission on Virginia’s manufacturing competitiveness. As John Reid Blackwell puts it in the Richmond Times-Dispatch: “State lawmakers want to know how much it costs manufacturing companies to do business in Virginia.”

That’s a worthwhile question to act. Despite its problems, manufacturing remains a pillar of Virginia’s economy. If manufacturers are to remain competitive in a global marketplace, state and local governments need to strip out all unnecessary costs and regulations.

The National Association of Manufacturers has found that regulatory costs account for nearly 22 percent of every dollar paid in manufacturing wages in the United States. What’s the comparable number for Virginia? Nobody knows. What are all the taxes and regulations that affect manufacturing costs? Nobody has compiled an inventory. We need to know, and the General Assembly is making an effort to find out.


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6 responses to “Asking the Right Questions”

  1. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    More applause for the effort. Manufacturing is key to producing capital – the gasoline for the engine of our economy. Production of capital in service industries (and there are many types of services from low to high end) is good, but not as solid as manufacturing.

    Maybe the Information Age economy will make some service industries, like new era banking, as basic and enduring as production from agriculture and natural resources and manufacturing.

    The Industrial Age changed agriculture, mining, fishing and lumbering but didn’t eliminate them. Likewise, the Information Age changes manufacturing, and all other work, but doesn’t eliminate them.

    Nano-technologies and bio-medicine are two of the big future industries and opportunities. Nuclear fusion may be – someday.

    Virginia should lead development of those capital producers.

  2. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Let’s strip out unnecessary minimum wage and residency requirements.

  3. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Overtime adds a great deal of regulatory costs, too….real test for the legislature’s commitment to manufacturing in Virginia will come over the coming explosion in electric power rates. The rest of this is fluff and puff; double the cost of juice and that will be the nail in manufacturing’s coffin.

  4. Scott Avatar

    If we want to get cheaper energy for manufacturing, lets get state incentives for renewable, distributed power. New Jersey is doing this with great effect. This will pay off for the state more in the long run than getting rid of living wages. Let’s race for the top instead of racing for the bottom.

  5. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    NJ is doing it to great effect because its electric rates are much, much higher than ours.

    Even with the projected fuel factor increases for AEP and VA Power, VA’s rates compare favorably to just about everywhere else.

  6. That does nothing to challenge my arguments.
    Virginia’s rates could be even better, but only if we challenge the status quo.

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