*By Carlo Versano* In the end, it was all about the talent. Amazon this week chose the talent pools of the D.C. and New York metro areas to base its split "HQ2" expansion after a year-long search during which city officials from across the country begged the e-commerce giant for the high-tech, highly-paid jobs they hoped might be a boon for economic development. The irony: the company will be bringing as many as 50,000 of those jobs to areas that can barely serve the residents, workers, and commuters they already have. The Big Apple is already facing a dual crisis of a lack of affordable housing and a chronically underfunded, rapidly-decaying subway system. On Thursday, the MTA, the state-run agency that operates public transit in New York, presented options for a cocktail of fare and toll hikes that it said would be needed to fill holes in a budget gap. That's apart from the $40 billion or more the agency requires to undertake the costly repairs needed to modernize the system. The idea of adding 25,000 new commuters to a neighborhood served primarily by one of the most [overcrowded](https://ny.curbed.com/2018/9/19/17871828/hudson-yards-new-york-subway-bus-capacity) lines in the system is already causing anxiety among current residents of Long Island City. At the same time the MTA struggles to stay operational, New York State is giving Amazon more than $1.5 billion in taxpayer-funded incentives, which works out to about $48,000 per job. That's in addition to $1 billion in potential city tax credits, and a federal tax break, since Long Island City is considered a distressed "opportunity zone" in the new tax law, despite having a median income far above the national average. In the suburbs of Washington, where traffic congestion is already among the worst in the nation, an affordable housing crisis has been building for years. Rising rents and home prices in cities like Arlington, which will be home to one of the new Amazon ($AMZN) hubs, have forced lower and moderate-income residents further from the city (and thus lengthening commute times and worsening traffic). Millennials who work in D.C. and have been saving to buy their first homes will almost certainly be among the first to feel the pinch. One Arlington condo jumped in price by $20,000 [overnight](https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/northern-virginia-property-owners-are-delighted-amazon-hq2-will-be-moving-in-renters-first-time-buyers-and-low-income-residents-arent/2018/11/13/47307aba-e457-11e8-b759-3d88a5ce9e19_story.html?utm_term=.7323202f5f1a) when the Amazon decision was first reported. This sense that Amazon played into an already raging debate over income inequality in America was the basis for the protests that erupted in Queens following the announcement, led in part by Representative-elect Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who castigated the governor and mayor for what she says amounts to taxpayers paying Amazon to hasten gentrification and worsen the housing crisis ー all for the flimsy return of "economic development." Meanwhile, on the other side of the East River, Alphabet's Google ($GOOGL) is quietly doubling its own New York City footprint with a massive [new real-estate deal](https://www.wsj.com/articles/google-plans-large-new-york-city-expansion-1541636579) in the works. A deal that Google says it will make without subsidies ー or the promise of a [helipad](https://d39w7f4ix9f5s9.cloudfront.net/4d/db/a54a9d6c4312bb171598d0b2134c/new-york-agreement.pdf).

Share:
More In Business
'GTA VI' Trailer Released Early and How Game Will Impact Industry Overall
Fans of the Grand Theft Auto series got a glimpse of the latest release that's not due out until 2025. The trailer was officially released after a leak on the 'X' platform, giving an idea to industry experts of the massive effect GTA will have on the gaming sector. Cheddar News senior reporter Michelle Castillo breaks it all down.
Stretching Your Dollar: End-of-the-Year Tax Questions Answered
Tax season is around the corner as soon as we conclude the holiday festivities. Mark Steber, chief tax information officer with Jackson Hewitt, joined Cheddar News to discuss some tax changes that people should be aware of and what to expect during next year's tax filing season.
Holiday Crafts for Less
Getting crafty for the holidays to entertain guests can be pretty expensive. Cheddar News explains how you can do all of that on a budget.
Stretching Your Dollar: How to Treat Yourself for the Holidays
The holiday season is here and it could be a stressful time as people plan shopping, cooking and traveling. Sally Holmes, editor-in-chief of InStyle Magazine, joined Cheddar News to discuss a new social media trend #Treatculture that helps people take a moment to treat themselves and how that is a psychological benefit to relieve stress.
Wikipedia's Most Viewed Stories 2023
Wikipedia has released its list of most viewed articles for 2023 with the site seeing over 84 billion visits. The most searched topic was ChatGPT with nearly 50 billion page views
Load More