9 Reasons a New Foxconn Contract Is Unlikely
Foxconn says the new deal is “within reach.” On the contrary, it’s far from settled.
Have you heard the news about Foxconn? They are about to sign a new contract with the state of Wisconsin.
That at least is what Foxconn says, and some in the media have reported. On Friday the company released a statement to the media saying that “Foxconn is optimistic” that an amended contract with the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation (WEDC) “is within reach.”
Readers will recall that officials with the WEDC and state Department of Administration have been trying for some time to renegotiate the contract with Foxconn, with no luck. And now the company says a new contract is imminent? There are many reasons to doubt this, including:
1. The impasse has lasted a very long time. It was back in March 2019 — 21 months ago — that Foxconn first broached the idea of renegotiating the contract. Since then the state and company have gotten exactly nowhere, suggesting this is not an easy impasse to solve.
2. Foxconn’s media statement has the feel of a spin job. The technology publication The Verge, was reporting on the latest contract negotiations with a story showing they were still far apart on key issues. Foxconn meanwhile released a sunny media statement and got the desired result, a news story by the AP with a headline that Foxconn and Wisconsin “nearing agreement.”
4. Foxconn still doesn’t know what it’s doing. As Hughes told the Business Journal, “For Foxconn, because they’re right at the beginning stages, there’s a lot of different ways that they’re thinking about what they’re going to be working on, whether it’s artificial intelligence or smart manufacturing.” So three and half years after Foxconn signed a contract with the state, it is still at the beginning stages trying to figure out what it will manufacture.
5. Not one of the ventures Foxconn announced have happened. The company’s original plan to build a Gen 10.5 LCD manufacturing plant was abandoned and replaced by a plan to manufacture Gen 6 LCD products, which has yet to happen. It has flirted with plans to make everything from airport coffee kiosks to fish farming or dairy exporting. In April it announced it would be manufacturing ventilators with a goal of 400 ventilators per week by the end of April and 700 per week by the end of May. No sign of those ventilators yet. Instead the company announced a month ago it would be manufacturing data servers, around the same time that “sources” told Bloomberg that Foxconn would be doing this work for Google. Except that there was no statement from Google or from Foxconn confirming this. Meanwhile the company has taken out a permit to use the facility it built in Mount Pleasant for storage.
6. The two parties can’t even agree on the basics. Foxconn has insisted to WEDC that it hasn’t violated the original contract, because it never promised to build a Gen 10.5 facility, despite explicit language in the contract spelling this out, as The Verge reported. But the state has said the Gen 10.5 project was central to the contract: “Without a Generation 10.5 TFT-LCD Fabrication Facility, there is no justification, or consideration, for the enormous tax credit incentives or expense to Wisconsin taxpayers.” Foxconn insists its agreement with the state was something vaguer, for “a transformational and sustainable high-tech manufacturing and technology ecosystem in Wisconsin that brings long-term investment and jobs.” But the WEDC has repeatedly made clear it won’t offer subsidies until it has specific information on the type of business, jobs and salaries the company plans.
8. Two contract loopholes could be deal breakers for Foxconn. The current contract has a loophole that allows the company to collect investment tax credits for hiring seasonal employees for as short a period as a few weeks. There is another loophole that could allow Foxconn to charge the state for work done outside Wisconsin, which the Legislative Audit Bureau has noted and Hughes has pledged to address. State officials will want to fix both loopholes because they allow Foxconn to game the system. For the same reason, the company will oppose modifications.
9. Foxconn’s optimism about a settlement went nowhere: The recent statement that the company was “within reach” of a settlement with the state echoes a statement by a Foxconn lawyer in a December 2 email to the WEDC saying “I am confident that after months of discussions we are on the brink of coming to acceptable terms” and “should be able to accomplish this objective at our meeting this Friday.” The Friday meeting on December 4 left the two parties still in the same place, with the WEDC still asking for specifics on the company’s plans, as the Wisconsin State Journal reported.
It’s a simple information request, but an impossibility for a company that has no idea what it can profitably manufacture in Wisconsin.
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More about the Foxconn Facility
- Mount Pleasant, Racine in Legal Battle Over Water After Foxconn Failure - Evan Casey - Sep 18th, 2024
- Biden Hails ‘Transformative’ Microsoft Project in Mount Pleasant - Sophie Bolich - May 8th, 2024
- Microsoft’s Wisconsin Data Center Now A $3.3 Billion Project - Jeramey Jannene - May 8th, 2024
- We Energies Will Spend $335 Million on Microsoft Development - Evan Casey - Mar 6th, 2024
- Foxconn Will Get State Subsidy For 2022 - Joe Schulz - Dec 11th, 2023
- Mount Pleasant Approves Microsoft Deal on Foxconn Land - Evan Casey - Nov 28th, 2023
- Mount Pleasant Deal With Microsoft Has No Public Subsidies - Evan Casey - Nov 14th, 2023
- Microsoft, State Announce Massive Data Center Expansion, Land Purchase - Joe Schulz - Nov 11th, 2023
- Gov. Evers Announces Microsoft Makes Major Investment in Wisconsin - Gov. Tony Evers - Nov 10th, 2023
- State Can’t Regulate We Energies $100 Million Project for Microsoft - Joe Schulz - Sep 20th, 2023
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