Fidelity has slashed about 4,000 jobs from Massachusetts in two years, and at least one local government chiefs sees that as a good reason to revisit some tax breaks. In an op-ed in the
Boston Globe, Northampton mayor
Clare Higgins argues that a tax credit for Fidelity and other mutual fund firms has grown "ineffective".
"In 1996, Massachusetts passed a tax break estimated by legislative sponsors to be worth $70 million annually for the mutual fund industry," Higgins writes. "Fidelity now is shedding its Massachusetts workers even more rapidly than its workers worldwilde. Nevertheless, it continues to benefit from the ongoing tax break." 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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