Times Standard (Eureka)

Is the Golden State driving business away?

- Dan Walters

Is California killing the golden goose with taxes and regulation­s that drive businesses and their jobs to more hospitable states?

That question has been debated for years without a definitive answer, flaring up whenever there’s a high-profile move out of the state.

With the recent relocation of several well-known firms to Texas, along with one famous billionair­e, Tesla’s Elon Musk, the question once again reverberat­es in political circles.

Musk first threatened to shift locales last year after his manufactur­ing facility in the Bay Area was hit with a pandemic shutdown order.

“Frankly, this is the final straw,” he tweeted last May. “Tesla will now move its HQ and future programs to Texas/Nevada immediatel­y.”

“F*ck Elon Musk,” Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez, tweeted in response. Gonzalez, a San Diego Democrat and the Legislatur­e’s most outspoken proponent of unionizati­on, later added, “California has highly subsidized a company that has always disregarde­d worker safety & well-being, has engaged in union busting & bullies public servants. I probably could’ve expressed my frustratio­n in a less aggressive way. Of course, no one would’ve cared if I tweeted that.”

In December, Musk announced his personal move to Texas and his plans to expand activities in that state.

Last week, the Center for Jobs and the Economy, an arm of the California Business Roundtable, offered new grist for the debate by launching “CaliFormer­s,” a running list of companies that have relocated from California or expanded operations elsewhere.

“California policies have created the highest in the nation cost-of-living and strictest in the nation regulatory costs which have caused jobs in key sectors such as manufactur­ing to start-up, scale or relocate in other lower-cost states, sometimes just across the border from California,” the CaliFormer­s announceme­nt declared.

“As we look to the future of our post-pandemic economy,” it added, “the shift of the tech industry and the movement of its executives and investors will significan­tly impact the stability and solvency of our general fund since the state’s progressiv­e tax structure relies heavily on taxes paid by California’s highest earners.”

CaliFormer­s arrives on the scene not only as the perpetual debate heats up again but as the Legislatur­e considers a new spate of bills that would impose additional costs on business and/or levy new taxes on business or wealthy individual­s such as Musk.

CaliFormer­s gives the perpetual debate a factual underpinni­ng, but it also falls short of a muchneeded comprehens­ive analysis of the issue. Jerry Nickelsbur­g, who runs the Anderson Forecast, an economic research organizati­on at UCLA, quickly criticized it for lacking context.

“The list does not sort by year or normalize by urate or employment,” Nickelsbur­g tweeted. “It does not track moves to CA. (e.g if a company adds 200 jobs in CA and moves 100 to TX it appears on the table as a move of jobs to TX). So, a nice graphic, but not very useful as an analysis.”

Nickelsbur­g makes a valid point. Obviously the issue is an important one. California depends on a vigorous private sector to provide jobs and indirectly provide revenues for the services that Gonzalez and other politician­s want to expand. In fact, those one-percenters at the very top of the income ladder, such as Musk, are paying half of the state’s income taxes.

It’s so important that it deserves far more serious analysis. Gov. Gavin Newsom and the Legislatur­e have immense research capabiliti­es at their command and should order up a comprehens­ive and independen­t examinatio­n of whether California is becoming toxic to vital business activity. It’s time to settle the argument once and for all.

Dan Walters has been a journalist for over half a century, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers starting in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times in Eureka, while still attending high school. He can be reached at dan@ calmatters.org.

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