Thread regarding Bank of New York Mellon Corp. layoffs

Why BNY Loves State Schools (Hint: It’s Not the School Spirit)

Companies like BNY and their consulting sidekicks have perfected the art of “economic development,” which mostly means convincing state and local governments that a few hundred cubicles and a ribbon‑cutting justify millions in tax incentives. McKinsey brings the playbook, BNY brings the headcount projections, and suddenly the state is handing out credits like party favors to “stimulate regional growth.”

Once the incentives are locked in, the hiring machine kicks in. States love when companies hire local graduates, and companies love it even more because those hires help them unlock annual tax credits tied to job‑creation commitments. New grads from state schools are especially attractive: they’re local, they’re eligible for incentive programs, and—let’s be honest—they’re cheaper than experienced workers. Salaries vary, but the pattern is predictable: new grads cost less, and incentive‑eligible hires cost even less to the company once the credits hit.

Who negotiates all this? At BNY, it’s typically a mix of Corporate Real Estate, Government Affairs, and Tax/Finance, working quietly behind the scenes to secure incentives without ever mentioning them to the employees whose jobs justify the credits.

And how do new grads help? Simple: every qualifying hire checks a box on the state’s incentive scorecard. The state gets “job creation.” BNY gets tax credits. And the new grads get… well, a selfie with Fabs and welcome to the Bounce House - North Campus.


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| 11 views | | 6 replies (last May 2) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kqd6xb69

6 replies (most recent on top)

The funniest part of that thread is everyone pretending this is only about ‘directional state schools.’ Please. University of Pittsburgh may be ‘state‑adjacent,’ but it’s close enough for BNY to play the tax‑credit bingo card with the Pennsylvania Governor’s Office. Jobs pledged, incentives unlocked, photo ops secured.

BNY didn’t suddenly discover a passion for local talent pipelines — they discovered that hiring in‑state grads checks the boxes needed to keep those sweet economic‑development credits flowing. It’s not philanthropy; it’s accounting.

So yes, the hiring patterns make perfect sense once you realize the real major BNY cares about is Tax Optimization, not Finance.

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Post ID: @q1+1kqd6xb69

New grads from state schools?
The deaf, d-mb and blind school.
These produce BNY management trainees.

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Post ID: @bb+1kqd6xb69

Time to end Corporate Welfare!

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Post ID: @b6+1kqd6xb69

Sure the bank might get a tax benefit but I’d argue this is generally a naturally beneficial arrangement. We consider a state school as a target hiring spot, local kids get jobs at a big company, and the bank also gets a benefit. Sounds like a reasonable policy to me.

Of course these deals have the devil in the details with how much is given in tax credit, how many need to be hired etc. but it’s a nice thing if you hire local workers generally

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Post ID: @b5+1kqd6xb69

Time end corporate welfare!

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Post ID: @b4+1kqd6xb69

The state gets “job creation.”
This is interesting in ‘how’ and how ‘many’?
All ones needs to request is how many hires BNY has achieved in each US state vs how many hires done in India.
Chances are near 100% that the numbers for India are counted in the states.
Tax credit fraud by BNY!!!

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Post ID: @af+1kqd6xb69

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