California Is Exporting Its Poor To Texas

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

California exports more than commodities such as movies, new technologies and produce. As The Sacramento Bee reports, it also exports truck drivers, cooks and cashiers.

Every year from 2000 through 2015, more people left California than moved in from other states. This migration was not spread evenly across all income groups, a Sacramento Bee review of U.S. Census Bureau data found.

The people leaving tend to be relatively poor, and many lack college degrees. Move higher up the income spectrum, and slightly more people are coming than going. About 2.5 million people living close to the official poverty line left California for other states from 2005 through 2015, while 1.7 million people at that income level moved in from other states – for a net loss of 800,000. During the same period, the state experienced a net gain of about 20,000 residents earning at least five times the poverty rate – or $100,000 for a family of three.

“There was really nothing left for me in California,” said Kundurazieff, who also writes a blog about his cats. “The cost of living was high. The rent was high. The job market was debatable.”

Not surprisingly, the state’s exodus of poor people is notable in Los Angeles and San Francisco counties, which combined experienced a net loss of 250,000 such residents from 2005 through 2015.

The leading destination for those leaving California is Texas, with about 293,000 economically disadvantaged residents leaving and about 137,000 coming for a net loss of 156,000 from 2005 through 2015. Next up are states surrounding California; in order, Arizona, Nevada and Oregon.

 

Losing impoverished residents to other states is better for the state’s economy than losing wealthy residents, some experts said. But they said the migration itself is a symptom of deeper social problems largely related to how expensive California has become.

“Why are people leaving? Economic reasons, the high cost of living, are certainly a part of it,” said Hans Johnson, senior fellow at the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California. “For those people (near the poverty line), California is not viable.”

By some measures, California has the highest poverty rate in the nation.

And as more and more residents leave, the burden to fund the state’s welfare exuberance will fall more and more on the wealthier (that actually pay taxes). Rather than secession, perhaps it’s time for the wealthy to join ‘the poor’ exodus and beat the crowd out of California…

George Bernard Shaw said, “A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.” In many cases Peter quietly moved away and took his money with him.

Remember when top professional golfer, Phil Michelson created quite a stir complaining about California taxes, while putting his home up for sale? He would have been better off staying quiet about his reasons. California Political Review reports:

“Tiger Woods moved from Orange County, California to Orange County, Florida. In the first year of that move, he saved $13 million in taxes. Is it worth $13 million a year taken by government to live in California? Woods said no. Now it looks like Phil Michelson is about to make the same decision. He earns $60 million a year-he would save north of $5 million a year to move to a free State, like Florida or Texas.”

And as Dennis Miller previously noted, the election of President Trump sent shock waves through much of the political class. Many public union pensions are woefully underfunded. They donated millions to Hillary Clinton’s election campaign and expected federal bailouts. They knew they could count on Mrs. Clinton; she has a great track record of rewarding her political donors. Today no one knows what the new administration will do.

In the meantime, the scramble is on. The politicians in states that have been heavily supporting Paul have a huge base, not because they have won over the hearts and minds of Peter; but rather because the working class got tired of being fleeced and left. The politicos have to find ways to make good on all their free programs. Cutting benefits will cause citizens to storm the palace. They must find ways to generate more revenue.

Brian Daniels warns us, The Growing Specter of State “Exit Taxes” as Residents Abandon High-Tax States:

“To be clear, it is not legal for states to charge a true exit tax on citizens changing their residency from one state to another (this is not the case for the federal government, which does charge a large exit tax).

So what do high-tax states do to try and prevent their residents from moving their legal residence to low- or no-tax states? In a word, they audit them.”

When a taxpayer is audited, the agency issues an assessment for unpaid taxes. It’s not “innocent until proven guilty.” You must prove they are wrong or the assessment stands.

Once you intend to leave you are of no value to the politicos. Most people do not have the means to go to court. For some, it becomes a government shakedown to extract as much wealth as they can on your way out the door.

9 thoughts on “California Is Exporting Its Poor To Texas

  1. Then you have the “re-entrance” tax…when I moved to Houston in 1975 leaving NY, I bought a Honda Civic, so that when I moved back to NY early 1976, I had to register the car in NY–and pay hefty “registration” and “sales tax” fees to the State of NY! Folks once you leave a heavy tax state like NY or Californication, you truly never ought to go back.

  2. Yep. The Californians are all coming here to Texas. This isn’t anything new. Texans have been bitching about it for years now. It’s upsetting the economic balance here because people from California are buying houses in cash because the price is so cheap for them. Now it’s upsetting native Texans from purchasing a good house. The same goes for jobs. Not only do they have to compete with illegals, they now have to compete with Californians. It’s bullshit. Stay the hell outta Texas. Find some other place to go. We dont want you. It also doesn’t help that corporations are all moving their businesses here, too.

    1. I just drove the stretch of I20 from Canton, TX to Shreveport, LA. It was heavily traveled and I wondered where all the people were going. There is a lot of people south of me in Texas.

  3. Another infuriating state of affairs article.

    “So what do high-tax states do to try and prevent their residents from moving their legal residence to low- or no-tax states? In a word, they audit them.”

    That’s right, Texas and a few other states don’t have their greedy, crooked hands on the private sector workers pay for labor. Once people clear up the theft of their earnings by the CRIMINAL fed. cabal, confiscated by way of the IRS, demanding their money in every form declared to be a tax, be returned that has been withheld and sent in as income taxes by the company they work for, ALL monies confiscated by fraud and deceit by the state CEASE. State income taxes are SOLEY based on the fed. income tax scam, and a damn scam it is, and they’ve run it on generations of those of us who do not work for the fed. govt. in some capacity.
    If anyone has one iota of skepticism as to whether or not this SO CALLED govt. is “good” and “honorable” and worthy of casting a vote for a pres., learn the truth about the income tax laws and what they have allowed to be stolen from the American Nationals wealth of their labor. I realize this is only a symptom of the TOTAL and utterly corrupt, thieving, lying, criminal cabal, that must be physically removed from within our borders, because they are diligently at work to take EVERYTHING and ANYTHING you possess.
    Why they are still able to lie, cheat and steal and murder us, as well as others around the world is such a reflection of our apathy as a whole. It is vexation of soul to me.
    http://losthorizons.com/
    People learn the truth, then act, and never back down when they try to scare you into continuing to STEAL your pay for labor. THEY KNOW what they’ve been doing concerning the income tax theft, as well as ALL the other scams they’ve pulled on us. They KNOW that Bill of Rights is OURS and that they CAN’T violate it, but they will continue until we say NO MORE!

    1. That’s right, Texas and a few other states don’t have their greedy, crooked hands on the private sector workers pay for labor.

      No, but in dealing with elderly people, they rank among the most corrupt states and I know from first hand experience. The cops in Texas are crooks as well as their hospitals and nursing homes and judges. They steal land of the elderly and tried on me, but Oklahoma wouldn’t play their game. My land is protected here. I wouldn’t live in Texas knowing what I do about that filthy state.

      1. The cities hire illegals to clean their police departments in Texas and the cops know it, yet they do nothing about it. So yes, the whole system is corrupt in Texas. No one has the balls to clear the bastards out.

        1. I just wish Texas would drop the holier than though attitude about their state being the best. It is no better than the others, just corrupt in different ways.

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