Texarkana Gazette

Companies flee California. Blame bad government

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Amid raging wildfires, rolling blackouts and a worsening coronaviru­s outbreak, it has not been a great year for California. Unfortunat­ely, the state is also reeling from a manmade disaster: an exodus of thriving companies to other states.

In just the past few months, Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. said it was leaving for Houston. Oracle Corp. said it would decamp for Austin, Texas. Palantir Technologi­es Inc., Charles Schwab Corp. and McKesson Corp. are all bound for greener pastures. No less an informatio­n-age avatar than Elon Musk has had enough. He thinks regulators have grown “complacent” and “entitled” about the state’s world-class tech companies.

No doubt, he has a point. Silicon Valley’s high-tech cluster has been the envy of the world for decades, but there’s nothing inevitable about its success. With competitio­n rising across the U.S., the area’s policymake­rs need to recognize the dangers ahead.

In recent years, San Francisco has seemed to be begging for companies to leave. In addition to familiar failures of governance — widespread homelessne­ss, inadequate transit, soaring property crime — it has also imposed more idiosyncra­tic hindrances. Far from welcoming experiment­ation, it has sought to undermine or stamp out home-rental services, food-delivery apps, ride-hailing firms, electric-scooter companies, facial-recognitio­n technology, delivery robots and more, even as the pioneers in each of those fields attempted to set up shop in the city. It tried to ban corporate cafeterias — a major tech-industry perk — on the not-so-sound theory that this would protect local restaurant­s. It created an “Office of Emerging Technology” that will only grant permission to test new products if they’re deemed, in a city bureaucrat’s view, to provide a “net common good.” Whatever the merits of such meddling, it’s hardly a formula for unbounded inventiven­ess.

California’s Legislatur­e has only made matters worse. A bill it enacted in 2019, ostensibly intended to protect gig workers, threatened to undo the business models of some of the state’s biggest tech companies until voters granted them a reprieve in a November referendum. A new privacy law has imposed immense compliance burdens — amounting to as much as 1.8% of state output in 2018 — while conferring almost no consumer benefits. An 8.8% state corporate tax rate and 13.3% top income-tax rate (the nation’s highest) haven’t helped.

Of course, California isn’t alone in squanderin­g such advantages. New York City has been the world’s top finance hub for many years, and increasing­ly had become home to a thriving tech community as well. But a similar blend of poor policy choices, high taxes, needless red tape, rising crime and occasional outright hostility — as with the senseless opposition to Amazon.com Inc.’s proposed headquarte­rs — has been pushing both industries to friendlier climes in recent years.

For now, the Bay Area is unlikely to be displaced as the nation’s top tech hub. After all, it’s still home to some of the world’s most valuable companies, draws an outsized share of venture-capital investment and remains an unrivaled incubator for startups. And prediction­s of Silicon Valley’s demise have proved reliably wrong for decades.

Even so, no state can antagonize its companies so extravagan­tly and expect them to stay put forever. As every California­n knows, the open road is all too inviting.

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