We’ve mentioned the California-to-Texas tech migration a few times here, as we ourselves have moved HQ from San Francisco to Austin.
Others that keenly observed us and followed suit include: Oracle, Hewlett-Packard Enterprise, and Elon Musk’s Twitter account.
So, what’s behind the corporate movement between the country’s 2 most populous states?
While this is certainly true, there is a bit of nuance as explained by the Wall Street Journal.
Here are key considerations:
Business-level taxation is a wash, with Texas actually collecting a higher % of private sector economic activity (5%) — more than the national average (4.5%) — while California takes 4.3% per the WSJ.
Due to looser land-use regulations, Texas is a comparatively cheaper place to own a home. And, per one tax expert, home ownership costs are a key variable in payrolls costs.
Combine that with no state-level income tax, and wooing talent for the long-term may be easier.
The rise of remote work does make the difference a bit moot for mobile white-collar workers. Either way, come say “hi” when the world’s normal again. 👋