Covered at Reason 24/7: Working Class Flees California
The buzz over California's … interesting grab-bag of tax and regulatory policies has been about the nudge toward the exit they provide to wealthy residents like Phil Mickelson and on small and start-up businesses that see greener pastures elsewhere. But the data suggests that a large proportion of people heading for the exits aren't those who rank among the wealthy, but those who might hope for prosperity in the future — or, at least a shot at a decent living. Not surprisingly, they're following in the path of the jobs that sustain them.
From the Wall Street Journal:
During the Great Depression, some 1.3 million Americans—epitomized by the Joad family in John Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath"—flocked to California from the heartland. To keep out the so-called Okies, the state enacted a law barring indigent migrants (the law was later declared unconstitutional). Los Angeles even set up a border patrol on the city limits. Soon the state may need to build a fence to keep latter-day Joads from leaving.
Over the past two decades, a net 3.4 million people have moved out of California for other states. But contrary to conservative lore, there has been no millionaires' march to Texas or other states with no income tax. In fact, since 2005 California has experienced a net in-migration of households earning more than $200,000, according to the U.S. Census's American Community Survey.
As it happens, most of California's outward-bound migrants are low- to middle-income, with relatively little education: those typically employed in agriculture, construction, manufacturing, hospitality and to some extent natural-resource extraction. Their median household income is about $40,000—two-thirds of the statewide median—and about 95% earn less than $80,000. Only one in 10 has a college degree, compared with 30% of California's population. Roughly 40% of the people leaving are Hispanic.
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Sweet. Once we get rid of all those filthy poor people, California will be a veritable heaven on earth.
Hey, it worked for Connecticut. Don't knock it until you've tried it.
Phil Mickelson left? Who'll miss him? I hate it when the group up ahead has a left-handed golfer. I'm always afraid he's playing the course in reverse and hitting the ball toward me.
"But contrary to conservative lore, there has been no millionaires' march to Texas or other states with no income tax."
I believe the HyR Commentariate debunked this myth already.
The gift from Pandora's Box disappears
The man on the mountain gets lost in the clouds
A tin can full of change
I liked the old Sparky better.
Stay there! You've got all those beaches and mountains and whatever else it is that people live there for. Think of the movie stars. And computer geniuses. Why, if you will all just tough it out for another twenty years, I'm certain that you'll all end up as Quentin Tarantino-Jobs-Wozniak movie directing computer programming rockstar CEOs. Or something. Or, if you are absolutely determined to infect, er, uh, move to, other states, then at least have the decency to leave EVERYTHING you think you know about the world back in California. The rest of us REALLY do NOT want your ideas.
Too late for Colorado apparently. So depressed...
Fuck.
Sorry, there can only be one Dunphy.