Why New York and D.C. should tell Amazon to take a hike

Beat it, Bezos

Jeff Bezos.
(Image credit: Illustrated | sb-borg/iStock, Wavebreakmedia/iStock, JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images, Library of Congress)

The quest for "HQ2" has left America's cities looking like a bunch of suckers.

When Amazon first announced that it was looking to open a second headquarters, it set off a massive, absurd competition between states and cities. The company promised 50,000 new jobs to the winner, and $5 billion in investments over two decades. In an unprecedented public contest, localities fell over one another to offer tax breaks and other incentives, often risking their own fiscal health in the process. In more than one instance, the bidding process got outsourced to local private firms. Plenty of city officials were left in the dark about what their own governments were even offering the tech behemoth.

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Jeff Spross

Jeff Spross was the economics and business correspondent at TheWeek.com. He was previously a reporter at ThinkProgress.