‘Everyone is moving out of California’

Austin City Limit signFeb. 27, 2013

By John Seiler

An old friend I’ve known 46 years called and said, “I was just hearing from a lot of people that everyone is moving out of California. Are you OK?” She lives on the East Coast.

I assured her that things weren’t quite that bad in California. And her statement reminded me of what Yogi Berra once said about a restaurant, “Nobody goes there anymore. It’s too crowded.”

What’s important about my friend’s question is the perception California now has across America: as a place people are leaving. The state does have more out-migration to other states than in-migration; population still is increasing here, slightly, only because of immigration from other countries.

But the real problem is that the perception of California as a failed state will mean fewer young, ambitious people will come here.

As the state with Tinseltown should know, perceptions can be more important than reality. So although California isn’t as bad off as others perceive it, what’s broadcast is an image of failure: of high unemployment, high housing costs, record high state taxes, out-of-control public-employee union power, environmentalist extremism and decades of misgovernance.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry gained national headlines earlier this month trolling in California for jobs and businesses to bring back to Texas. Probably not many businesses were convinced to leave the Golden State for the Lone Star State.

But young business entrepreneurs everywhere might have been influenced. A computer hotshot in Pennsylvania might choose Austin instead of Silicon Valley because in Austin it’s easier to buy a decent-sized home — or any home — and taxes are a lot lower. His salary — say, $150,000 a year — goes a lot farther in Texas.

No one knows about the young hotshot’s choice because he never moved to California in the first place; so he never “left.” But California still has lost a productive worker and taxpayer.

This probably has happened tens of thousands of times, and will happen tens of thousands of times more.

California’s real problem may not be people leaving, but talented people not coming here who in better days would have streamed in.

 


Related Articles

Just dissolve Bell

John Seiler: There’s a political and legal fight now over who or what will control the city of Bell, whose

What govt. workers really think of their mammoth pay, perks, pleasures and pensions

April 5, 2012 By John Seiler Ever wonder what government workers think of their gigantic pay, perks, pleasures and pensions?

Gov. Brown says one would ‘think’ Dems for disadvantaged

May 20. 2103 By Chris Reed On Friday, I noted that the state budget scrum always involved a series of