In this essay, Jim Landers, associate professor of clinical public affairs and Enarson fellow, John Glenn College of Public Affairs, The Ohio State University, describes takeaways from the 2022 National Conference of State Legislatures/The Pew Charitable Trusts Roundtable on Evaluating Economic Development Tax Incentives. The event focused on the fundamentals of incentive evaluation: approaches; data collection, sources, and analysis; and reporting of results.
This piece was originally published by Pew in a February 2023 newsletter distributed to tax incentive evaluators and scholars.
Fundamentals First!
Jim Landers
Associate Professor of Practice in Public Affairs, Enarson Fellow
John Glenn College of Public Affairs
The Ohio State University
The eighth annual NCSL/Pew Incentive Evaluators Roundtable was a focus on fundamentals. While the sessions and group discussions were broad in scope, a common thread running throughout the roundtable was an emphasis on the essential building blocks of incentive evaluations:
Evaluation approaches. This year’s agenda covered the myriad angles from which evaluators have approached their work. Several evaluations focused on program design features and administrative processes; others assessed program activities and cost. Not surprisingly, numerous evaluations addressed program effectiveness and impacts incorporating “but for,” novel ways of measuring progress towards programmatic goals, and distributional effects.
Key takeaways
Data collection, sources, and analysis. Obtaining valid and reliable data to measure the performance of incentive programs is one of the most challenging facets of evaluation work. The analytical methods that evaluators can employ to measure performance ultimately depend on these data. The Roundtable explored a variety of data sources: administrative data, survey data collected from program participants, and secondary data sources (such as the U.S. Census Bureau’s Service Annual Survey, Annual Business Survey, and the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics dataset and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages). For the first time, the Roundtable included a session on regional economic models (RIMS II, IMPLAN, and REMI), the economic data they house, and demonstrations of how to use them for incentive evaluation.
Key takeaways
Reporting evaluation results. The keynote speaker who kicked off the Roundtable, Maryland State Delegate Julie Palakovich-Carr, discussed her experiences using incentive program evaluations to drive policymaking in Maryland – specifically for the state’s Enterprise Zone program. Delegate Palakovich-Carr’s extensive discussion zeroed in on the important role of evaluators in providing timely information to various audiences including policymakers, program administrators, the public, and the media. The target audience will determine the type, depth, and format of the information that evaluators should provide.
Key takeaways
During this year’s Roundtable, we saw how far the field of tax incentive evaluation has progressed in less than 10 years. Evaluators continue to experiment with new approaches, build on their past work, and sometimes return to the basics. This is challenging work, to be sure, but it matters and is having an impact.