http://www.startribune.com/politics/state/37645399.htmlIn his State of the State address at the Capitol in St. Paul, Pawlenty focused on job growth and improving the state's business climate as a remedy for budget woes: He proposed a cut in the state's business tax rate from 9.8 percent to 4.8 percent over the next six years; a $50 million package of tax credits that he said could generate more than $100 million in new investments; and a 100 percent exemption from sales tax to encourage business to buy new equipment.
"In 2009, it costs too much for employers to create and keep jobs in this state," Pawlenty said in prepared remarks released before the address. "If we want to build up employment, we need to bring those costs down."
Job creation has already occupied a large portion of the rhetoric as the 2009 legislative session gets underway. But Pawlenty is likely to face criticism about proposals that could be seen as increasing loopholes for businesses rather than closing them. Even as he touted one of his premier job-creation programs, JOBZ, legislators stand ready to challenge its effectiveness and to question the confirmation of Pawlenty's commissioner overseeing the program.
:popcorn:
Read the 120+ comments. A few of seem to make far more coherent sense than the governor's quote about costing too much for employers to keep jobs here. (Doesn't he realize that the US economy might just collapse if this same trend continues? Or what is everybody else not realizing?)