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Economy
See other Economy Articles

Title: California Dreamin'—of Jobs in Texas
Source: WSJ
URL Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100 ... 356340.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Published: Apr 23, 2011
Author: John Fund
Post Date: 2011-04-23 10:01:02 by CZ82
Keywords: None
Views: 28211
Comments: 45

California Dreamin'—of Jobs in Texas Hounded by taxes and regulations, employers in the once-Golden State are moving East..

By John Fund

Austin, Texas

It wasn't your usual legislative hearing. A group of largely Republican California lawmakers and Democratic Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom traveled here last week to hear from businesses that have left their state to set up shop in Texas.

"We came to learn why they would pick up their roots and move in order to grow their businesses," says GOP Assemblyman Dan Logue, who organized the trip. "Why does Chief Executive magazine rate California the worst state for job and business growth and Texas the best state?"

The contrast is undeniable. Texas has added 165,000 jobs during the last three years while California has lost 1.2 million. California's jobless rate is 12% compared to 8% in Texas.

"I don't see this as a partisan issue," Mr. Newsom told reporters before the group met with Texas Republican Gov. Rick Perry. The former San Francisco mayor has many philosophical disagreements with Mr. Perry, but he admitted he was "sick and tired" of hearing about the governor's success luring businesses to Texas.

State Assemblyman Dan Logue, R., and Assembly Minority Leader Connie Conway, R., during a news conference on the Texas meeting. .Hours after the legislators met with Mr. Perry, another business, Fujitsu Frontech, announced that it is abandoning California. "It's the 70th business to leave this year," says California business relocation expert Joe Vranich. "That's an average of 4.7 per week, up from 3.9 a week last year." The Lone Star State was the top destination, with 14 of the 70 moving there.

Andy Puzder, the CEO of Hardee's Restaurants, was one of many witnesses to bemoan California's hostile regulatory climate. He said it takes six months to two years to secure permits to build a new Carl's Jr. restaurant in the Golden State, versus the six weeks it takes in Texas. California is also one of only three states that demands overtime pay after an eight-hour day, rather than after a 40-hour week. Such rules wreak havoc on flexible work schedules based on actual need. If there's a line out the door at a Carl's Jr. while employees are seen resting, it's because they aren't allowed to help: Break time is mandatory.

"You can't build in California, you can't manage in California and you have to pay a big tax," Mr. Puzder told the legislators. "In Texas, it's the opposite—which is why we're building 300 new stores there this year."

Opinion Journal Columnist John Fund on Canada's new cable news channel. .Other states are even snatching away parts of California's entertainment industry. The Milken Institute, based in Santa Monica, Calif., reports that 36,000 entertainment jobs have left the state since 1997. The new film "Battle: Los Angeles," which is set in California, was filmed in Louisiana.

"The red tape is ridiculous," says Mark Tolley, the managing partner of B. Knightly Homes, which relocated to Austin from Long Beach in 2005. "Regulators see developers as wearing a black hat and the environmental laws have run amok."

"I'm a pro-jobs Democrat," Mr. Newsom told me. "My party needs to get back into the business of jobs." Mr. Newsom says he's developing an economic development plan to present to Gov. Jerry Brown, who he says "gets it" on the need for business-friendly policies. Mr. Newsom told me that what impressed him most about Mr. Perry and the Texas legislators was their singular focus on job creation.

California, by contrast, seems to constantly lose focus. Several Democrats who agreed to go on the Texas trip were pressured by public-employee unions to drop out—and many did. And just as Texas business leaders were testifying about how the state's tort reforms had improved job creation, word came of California's latest priority: On April 14, the state senate passed a bill mandating that all public school children learn the history of disabled and gay Americans.

One speaker from California shook his head in wonder: "You can have the most liberated lifestyle on the planet, but if you can't afford to put gas in your car or a roof over your head it's somewhat limited."

The most dramatic reform California could make would be to change its boom-and-bust tax system so it doesn't depend on a small number of wealthy residents who can flee the state. The idea would be to broaden the income tax base and lower the state's high rates. It works today in seven states ranging from Colorado to Massachusetts. Of course, the Lone Star State has no state income or capital gains tax at all.

"Texas' economy is far less volatile due to its having neither a progressive income tax system nor a large tax burden," concludes "Rich States, Poor States," a study by the American Legislative Exchange Council. Less volatility also allows Texas to keep expenditures in check. While it shares with California the challenge of a huge budget deficit this year, it's expected to close it without raising taxes. Texas's overall spending burden remains below what it was in 1987—a remarkable feat.

When Jerry Brown ran for president in 1992, he understood the distorting nature of the tax code and proposed a flat tax with deductions only for rent, mortgage interest and charitable contributions. He called it "a silver bullet" for the economy. Mr. Brown has since abandoned that idea, grousing recently to a state legislator that "the flat tax cost me the New York Democratic primary."

But if California continues its economic decline, something Texas-sized in its ambitions may be called for— whether it's a moratorium on new business regulations or a restructuring of the state's dysfunctional unemployment compensation or litigation. Nothing less is likely to stem the outflow of businesses and jobs from the Golden State.


Poster Comment:

"I'm a pro-jobs Democrat," Mr. Newsom told me. "...... LOL.... yea right....

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 28.

#3. To: CZ82 (#0)

Let 'um go! We don't need anymore cheap labor employers in California.

lucysmom  posted on  2011-04-23   11:58:51 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: lucysmom (#3)

Let 'um go! We don't need anymore cheap labor employers in California.

That's just that much more you're gonna have to shell out for the Welfare babies, out of your own pocket.......

CZ82  posted on  2011-04-23   13:41:41 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: CZ82 (#5)

That's just that much more you're gonna have to shell out for the Welfare babies, out of your own pocket.......

Really? It takes a minimal income of around $66,000 a year for a family of three to be independent in the California county where I live. That means people can work full time for a cheap labor employer and still need some form of welfare to get by.

A minimum wage employee would have to work 215 hours a week just to afford a two bedroom apartment here. It is all well and good to suggest that low wages encourage people to work hard and better themselves, however it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that just surviving doesn't leave much time or energy to pursue that self betterment program.

Cheap labor employers whine about taxes while transferring the cost of cheap labor to taxpayers. Who needs that?

lucysmom  posted on  2011-04-23   14:52:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#27. To: lucysmom (#13)

So in essence what you're saying is because of things that happened in the past, is the cause of your problems currently.....

Let me guess, wages for a significant number of people got "WAY" too high. This in conjunction with tourism, unrealistic housing values, unrealistic property values and high taxes have driven up the cost of living (COL) so much, that the "Average" person can't survive on "average" wages..... (Which you used to be able to do it this country, but no more).... On top of that the amount of "Above average paying jobs" is dwindling by the day with no relief in sight.... The businesses are going to lower COL areas or overseas to stay competitive in the marketplace.....

And now the "Above average" people are now mad at these "average" people, because they don't want to "subsidize" the problem "the above average created" in the first place... So the answer is to "either" pay everybody more money, so they can live better... (which will in return drive up the cost of living even more, exacerbating the problem) ...... or better yet tell them to get the hell out of our state so "WE" can have out perfect little Utopia.....

For a start why don't you demand your state and local governments round up and kick out all of the Illegal aliens there.... That would reduce your tax burden significantly, but that would also reduce the amount of Democrat voters too so we know that isn't going to happen......

All I can say is you have your work cut out for you, and some "painful" decisions are going to have to be made to fix the mess.... and some folks are going to have to pull their heads out of the sand and take a good hard look at reality and learn to deal with it....

CZ82  posted on  2011-04-24   8:37:46 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#28. To: CZ82 (#27)

And now the "Above average" people are now mad at these "average" people, because they don't want to "subsidize" the problem "the above average created" in the first place... So the answer is to "either" pay everybody more money, so they can live better... (which will in return drive up the cost of living even more, exacerbating the problem) ...... or better yet tell them to get the hell out of our state so "WE" can have out perfect little Utopia.....

You are off track in so many ways. The county I live in has 4 of the 100 wealthiest cities in the US within its borders, two in the top 10. I live in one of the wealthiest zip codes. (north end of Silicon Valley) The neighboring county is among the 25 wealthiest in the US.

Those rich guys need people to clean their pools, tend their children and gardens, wait on their tables, stock shelves in their grocery stores, man the cash registrars, fit their shoes, collect their garbage, repair their cars, wash their cars, lay their carpets, repair their homes, answer their phones, open their mail, clean their clothes, teach their children, make appointments for them with their doctors and dentists, and on and on. Now we don't just have a few of those rich people competing with us average guys for a place to live, we have A LOT of them - what do you think that does to property values in an area where land is scarce?

From the CIA World Factbook: The onrush of technology largely explains the gradual development of a "two-tier labor market" in which those at the bottom lack the education and the professional/technical skills of those at the top and, more and more, fail to get comparable pay raises, health insurance coverage, and other benefits. Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households. What happened to "A rising tide lifts all boats?"

Average people who work and WORK HARD have been loosing ground, through no fault of their own since 1975, and a brain-washed pipsqueak like you comes along to tell them that they are lazy, lack gumption, and are parasites sucking the life blood out of the worthy and productive. No wonder people are mad.

Very clever of the radical right to reduce the argument to "pay everybody more money, so they can live better... (which will in return drive up the cost of living even more, exacerbating the problem)" Ooh - see - better pay will hurt you too. (What happened to that rising tide thingie?)

lucysmom  posted on  2011-04-24   11:33:22 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 28.

#30. To: lucysmom (#28) (Edited)

Very clever of the radical right to reduce the argument to "pay everybody more money, so they can live better... (which will in return drive up the cost of living even more, exacerbating the problem)" Ooh - see - better pay will hurt you too.

Maybe because it's the truth.....

So what if "everybody" (except for the evil rich) in your county made $75K per year.... what would that do to your cost of living?????? You're blaming the evil rich for ruining it for "everybody" else by making the cost of living skyrocket, don't you think everybody making $75K would accomplish the same thing..... make it go up even more???? You might want to start blaming the government for printing all of that money over the years, that has contributed to making the dollar almost worthless.....

CZ82  posted on  2011-04-24 15:52:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#31. To: lucysmom (#28)

You are off track in so many ways. The county I live in has 4 of the 100 wealthiest cities in the US within its borders, two in the top 10. I live in one of the wealthiest zip codes. (north end of Silicon Valley) The neighboring county is among the 25 wealthiest in the US.

Those rich guys need people to clean their pools, tend their children and gardens, wait on their tables, stock shelves in their grocery stores, man the cash registrars, fit their shoes, collect their garbage, repair their cars, wash their cars, lay their carpets, repair their homes, answer their phones, open their mail, clean their clothes, teach their children, make appointments for them with their doctors and dentists, and on and on. Now we don't just have a few of those rich people competing with us average guys for a place to live, we have A LOT of them - what do you think that does to property values in an area where land is scarce?

If I'm so far off track then why did you agree with what I said about "a significant amount of people being paid way too much in the past, and unrealistic housing and property prices" ?????

Why don't you just tell the evil rich to go take a "phucking" hike, get lost, go away, jump off a cliff or whatever you prefer..... Or maybe just put them all in a playpen away from the average working joe..... Or you could just move somewhere else and commute into town.... the choice is yours.....

The problem is if the rich did leave then all of the jobs would disappear and everybody would be on Welfare..... Commuting would cost an arm and a leg... Your problem is not unique it's happening all over this country..... and there is no easy solution to it.....

CZ82  posted on  2011-04-24 16:05:14 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#32. To: lucysmom (#28)

Average people who work and WORK HARD have been loosing ground, through no fault of their own since 1975, and a brain-washed pipsqueak like you comes along to tell them that they are lazy, lack gumption, and are parasites sucking the life blood out of the worthy and productive. No wonder people are mad.

I didn't say the "hard working" ones are parasites, only the lazy ones..... And you seem to forget that I'm one of those average people too, not one of the evil rich as the Left puts it...... I've already retired from one line of work and am working on my second "retirement" as we speak... If that's what it takes to provide for my family then so be it, I'm doing it..... So I think I have an idea about how it works.....

CZ82  posted on  2011-04-24 16:14:35 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#33. To: lucysmom (#28)

From the CIA World Factbook: The onrush of technology largely explains the gradual development of a "two-tier labor market" in which those at the bottom lack the education and the professional/technical skills of those at the top and, more and more, fail to get comparable pay raises, health insurance coverage, and other benefits. Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households. What happened to "A rising tide lifts all boats?"

If you want to get to the top 20% then you have to get the education for it... If you don't to put in the time then don't whine about it.....

CZ82  posted on  2011-04-24 16:33:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 28.

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