sycasey;524842 said:
I have little doubt that CEOs would love to relax the regulatory and tax environment of California, since it would make their jobs easier, however citing their opinions about these things is not the same as saying that companies are actually leaving California at a rate faster than other businesses are arriving or being created to replace them. Some companies may dislike the taxes but choose to stay for other reasons.
The 1:1 comparison of California to Texas at this one given moment is not that useful either; there could be many reasons why one state is losing jobs while another is not. The regulatory climate could be only one small part of that.
This is a "study" that is simply a list of companies that have left the state (in whole or in part), with no attempt to make comparisons and determine if this has actually resulted in a net loss, or if more companies are leaving California than are leaving most other states. It's not much of a methodology. I'm sure many companies leave CA every year -- it's a big state with a lot of competition, and there are a lot of companies.
Furthermore, it seems to me that nearly every one of these articles is written by someone with a clear agenda to promote less regulation and lower business taxes, just based on the language they use and the conclusions they jump to without a truly rigorous examination. This is better than nothing, but it's not really the proof I'm looking for.
Look, it probably won't matter who the source is if it conflicts with your opinion because you're going to think it is biased or unreliable. Of course CEO's opinions matter since, subject to board approval, the CEOs have final say on restructuring, capital expenditure, and relocation. If they think CA is the absolute worst for business expansion, it does matter. They are the decision makers.
Also, if you read the reasons cited by the company themselves in the "study," you would see the reasons often being cited by the companies themselves are the cost-savings and business friendly environment in the new location. Also, you don't think that a record number of companies leaving (193 in 2010 from 51 in 2009) indicates that CA is suffering a net deficit in company relocation? Using your common sense and personal experience, does it seem like 142 more companies relocated to CA in 2010 than in 2009 to offset 142 more companies leaving in 2010 than in 2009?
You dismiss what the CEOs think or the gross number of companies leaving CA (or my personal dealings with executives as a corporate partner at a law firm) but you are convinced by some poster making some vague reference to Cal's public policy study. It is hard for me to believe that academia has so much more insight into what businesses will do than the executives and the companies themselves.
At the end of the day, it doesn't matter. It seems like no one on either side will be convinced. Even God could tell us what is happening, and if we don't like it, we will just accuse him of being biased and, therefore, unreliable.