Site icon MacDailyNews

Intel CEO Otellini: U.S. faces looming tech decline, says Obama’s ‘Keynesian economics not working’

Apple Online Store“Intel chief executive Paul Otellini offered a depressing set of observations about the economy and the Obama administration Monday evening, coupled with a dark commentary on the future of the technology industry if nothing changes,” Declan McCullagh reports for CNET. “Otellini’s remarks during dinner at the Technology Policy Institute’s Aspen Forum here amounted to a warning to the administration officials and assorted Capitol Hill aides in the audience: Unless government policies are altered, he predicted, ‘the next big thing will not be invented here. Jobs will not be created here.'”

Advertisement: The iPad. With a 9.7″ touch screen & amazing new apps, it does things no tablet PC, netbook, or e-reader could. Starts at $499. Shop Now.

McCullagh reports, “The U.S. legal environment has become so hostile to business, Otellini said, that there is likely to be ‘an inevitable erosion and shift of wealth, much like we’re seeing today in Europe–this is the bitter truth.’ …Otellini singled out the political state of affairs in Democrat-dominated Washington, saying: “I think this group does not understand what it takes to create jobs. And I think they’re flummoxed by their experiment in Keynesian economics not working.”

“Since an unusually sharp downturn accelerated in late 2008, the Obama administration and its allies in the U.S. Congress have enacted trillions in deficit spending they say will create an economic stimulus — but have not extended the Bush tax cuts and have pushed to levy extensive new health care and carbon regulations on businesses,” McCullagh reports. “‘They’re in a ‘Do’ loop right now trying to figure out what the answer is,’ Otellini said. As a result, he said, ‘every business in America has a list of more variables than I’ve ever seen in my career.’ If variables like capital gains taxes and the R&D tax credit are resolved correctly, jobs will stay here, but if politicians make decisions ‘the wrong way, people will not invest in the United States. They’ll invest elsewhere.'”

McCullagh reports, “Take factories. ‘I can tell you definitively that it costs $1 billion more per factory for me to build, equip, and operate a semiconductor manufacturing facility in the United States,’ Otellini said.”

“The rub: Ninety percent of that additional cost of a $4 billion factory is not labor but the cost to comply with taxes and regulations that other nations don’t impose,” McCullagh reports. “(Cypress Semiconductor CEO T.J. Rodgers elaborated on this in an interview with CNET, saying the problem is not higher U.S. wages but anti-business laws: ‘The killer factor in California for a manufacturer to create, say, a thousand blue-collar jobs is a hostile government that doesn’t want you there and demonstrates it in thousands of ways.’) ‘If our tax rate approached that of the rest of the world, corporations would have an incentive to invest here,’ Otellini said. But instead, it’s the second highest in the industrialized world, making the United States a less attractive place to invest–and create jobs–than places in Europe and Asia that are ‘clamoring’ for Intel’s business.”

Full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Readers too numerous to mention individually for the heads up.]

Exit mobile version