Soon to come – for more information call Frank Howell at (662) 686-3366

Special to the DBJ:
State politics and economic growth

Analysis by Julie Whitehead
DBJ Contributing Writer

It was delightful to see so many Delta friends at the recent Boo Ferriss tribute in Jackson, presented by the Mississippi Sports Foundation and Hall of Fame.

No sports figure in Mississippi more deserves such an honor, which includes a special trophy in his name to be awarded each year to the outstanding college player in our state.
The keynote speaker was an old friend of mine, David Halberstam, who has won a Pulitzer Prize and has authored twenty books. Halberstam also spoke later in the week at the dedication of the William F. Winter Archives and History Building in Jackson.

I spent. the last year as president of the Mississippi Historical Society and worked closely with the Archives and History staff, several of whom also serve as staff for the Historical Society.

Halberstam, who moved from being a journalist in Mississippi to the New York Times and finally to becoming a distinguished historian, has covered a lot of politics around the nation.

He said privately during his visit here (and he has a daughter teaching in Greenville) that he has never seen such a dirty campaign as the one just completed.

I don’t think he was blaming one candidate or one party but describing the spirit of the campaign in many of the races. Both sides, especially in the governor’s and lieutenant governor’s races, set records for vituperation and mudslinging,

A major argument, to oversimplify, was that one gubernatorial candidate-accused the other of being on speaking terms with Mexico and China, and the other said his opponent was on speaking terms with Bill Clinton and Al Gore.

The one thing they probably agreed on but could not say publicly was that neither man as governor would be able to have much impact on tax revenues, unemployment or economic growth, since these are principally determined by the national economy.

Mississippi governors and the Legislature have done as good a job as anybody in offering inducements to outside companies to move here. If they have not come in as large numbers,as to Texas or Florida or Arizona,it is for reasons of climate and location, which we cannot control, but also it is heavily about education.

The competition today among states to attract industry is about who has a better public education system, a better college and university system and a better trained, more skilled, better disciplined work force, not just the cheapest labor rates.

We have serious problems in all those areas. Even in the best of times we have difficulty finding the revenues to address these problems.

Let us hope our new governor, renowned for his lobbying skills, can use his powers of persuasion with business, industry, labor, the Legislature and the Federal Government to help pull Mississippi out of the ditch we are currently in and prove me wrong, that a governor can’t do much about the economy. DBJ

(David Bowen, a Jackson resident, is a former second district congressman.)


Stock Quotes
Dow (^DJI)
·Last trade: 11390.72 -
·Change: +41.44 (0.37)

Nasdaq (^IXIC)
·Last trade: 2305.96 -
·Change: +25.85 (1.13)

S&P 500 (^GSPC)
·Last trade: 1259.53 -
·Change: +6.99 (0.56)

Get Chart: 

Symbol Lookup

 

Delta Business Journal
P.O. Box 117 • 125 South Court Street • Cleveland, MS 38732
Tel: (662) 843-2700• Fax: (662) 843-0505
© 2004, Coopwood Publishing Group, Inc.

ggg