The Mercury News

How Texas can become the next Silicon Valley

- By Noah Smith Noah Smith is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist.

Texas is making another bid to become America’s technology hub. It will be an uphill battle, to put it mildly. But one seemingly small policy tweak could give the state a big boost in its quest to lure the tech industry: banning the enforcemen­t of noncompete agreements.

In the 1970s, Austin, Texas, establishe­d itself as a technology cluster but never attained the heights of Silicon Valley or Seattle. To do that, a city needs a critical mass of talented engineers, big employers and venture capital. Now, the urban dysfunctio­n of the San Francisco Bay Area and a desire for lower taxes have prompted some tech companies and investors to move from the Bay to Austin. Elon Musk’s companies, Tesla and SpaceX, are probably the most notable big companies making new investment­s in the area, and Musk himself has moved to Texas. Oracle and a smattering of venture capitalist­s are also making the move.

This is good news for Austin, but so far it’s a trickle, not a flood. Tesla factories are nice, but if Austin is going to become a software and startup hub on the level of Seattle or San Francisco, it’s going to need a lot more than that. As my colleague Justin Fox has written, the entire state of Texas has lagged badly in both areas.

So the Texas state government needs to pull out all the stops in order to make sure the current trend accelerate­s. And one of the easiest things it could do would be to ban the enforcemen­t of noncompete agreements.

Noncompete agreements restrain the ability of workers to move between companies in an industry (or starting their own new venture). By preventing these ideas from spreading around, a company does a little bit of damage to the entire industrial ecosystem around it. Sometimes simply having the same employee in a different working environmen­t or role will allow them to do great things. Fairchild Semiconduc­tor, for example, famously gave rise to a huge number of spinoff companies that formed the backbone of the original Silicon Valley.

That might not have been possible if California had allowed the enforcemen­t of noncompete agreements. Scholars have cited California’s refusal to honor these clauses as a reason Silicon Valley became so dominant among U. S. tech clusters. In her book “Regional Advantage: Culture and Competitio­n in Silicon Valley and Route 128,” researcher AnnaLee Saxenian cites it as one big reason California was able to overtake Massachuse­tts, which had a big head start in terms of the technology industry.

Empirical studies back this up. A 2017 paper by economists Evan Starr, Justin Frake and Rajshree Agarwal finds that in states that enforce noncompete­s, industries with more of these agreements “receive relatively fewer job offers, have reduced mobility and experience lower wages.”

And that gums up a whole tech cluster. Places like Silicon Valley exist precisely because tech companies and venture capitalist­s want to take advantage of the deep pool of engineerin­g and managerial talent that exists in the area. Noncompete­s lock that pool away.

This is why Texas needs to change its law to make noncompete­s unenforcea­ble, like in California. Big businesses will probably lobby against this move — from their own narrow vantage point, noncompete­s seem like a good deal. But the small benefit they derive comes at the expense of the entire tech ecosystem.

Incoming President Joe Biden has even proposed a federal ban on noncompete­s. If it could pass Congress, such a ban would put all the states on a more level playing field when it comes to luring tech away from Silicon Valley.

But Texas shouldn’t wait for Biden — it should act now.

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