CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D.
ELIAS
“SIGNS INDICATE CALIFORNIA RECOVERY
WILL LAST”
There are still skeptics who maintain
the California economy remains in recession, that talk of economic recovery
amounts to whistling past the proverbial graveyard when unemployment remains
above 7 per cent.
Gov. Jerry Brown labeled these folks
“declinists” two years ago, when unemployment was much higher and the signs of
recovery were not nearly as strong as they are today.
But those signs are now seemingly
almost everywhere, even though a few major corporations are in the process of
moving headquarters elsewhere.
For one thing, in midsummer,
California – like the rest of America –finally had gained back all jobs lost in
the recession of 2007-11. The new jobs may be in different places and of
somewhat different types than those that were lost, but the fact is there
actually has been a little bit of job growth since 2008, something that
befuddles the declinists. The figures come from a report by the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas.
Then there’s the fact that California
lawmakers are starting to realize this state has serious competition for some
of its key industries, with other states and even some foreign countries
willing to grant large subsidies to companies that move headquarters or parts
of their businesses.
One example is the upcoming move of
Toyota’s national headquarters, complete with its sparkling museum of classic
cars the company has produced since the 1930s, to a Dallas suburb. Not only
will Toyota get large tax reductions for at least its first eight years in
Texas, but it will pay far less for the land it needs than it figures to get
when it sells the land it will vacate in the Los Angeles suburb of Torrance.
That’s standard procedure in many
states. Louisiana, for example, has attracted large amounts of film and TV
production not only because of its green scenery, but also because production companies
save as much as 30 percent of their costs by going there. That’s through a
combination of subsidized hotel rates and equipment rentals, tax relief and
lower-priced labor. The same happens in places like North Carolina, Idaho and
New York.
The first step in California lawmakers
wising up came when the Legislature during the summer expanded and extended tax
exemptions for movie and TV production here. Then they passed a bi-partisan
bill sponsored by Democratic Assemblyman Steve Fox and Republican state Sen.
Steve Knight, both of Palmdale, giving military contractors Boeing Co. and
Lockheed Martin as much as $420 million in tax credits over 15 years for
production of a new strategic bomber to replace the B-2, which was also
developed largely in the Antelope Valley. In case they don’t get the Defense
Department contract for that project, another bill with the same benefit for
Northrop Corp. would provide similar help – about $28 million a year, or 17
percent of wages paid to manufacturing workers.
There has been reluctance here to
subsidize big industries, one reason California has lost a lot of them to other
states and countries. There is good reason for that hesitance, as subsidies
raise questions of favoritism and special interest influence. But with others
offering so much, California at least now realizes it must get into this game.
Then there’s venture capital, where
the Silicon Valley this spring absolutely dominated the world scene. Fully 41
percent of all venture dollars invested around the world from April through
June went to San Francisco Bay area startups, a big improvement from the first
quarter, when places like Texas and Massachusetts drew significant investment.
But last spring, all of Europe got
less than half what went to Silicon Valley, according to a report from
PitchBook Data. The end result of this should be more companies headquartered
in California, to join former startups like Google, Intel, Yelp and Twitter.
Put it all together and you get a
dynamic picture of job recovery, the prospect of great job growth and a reborn
determination to preserve what the state already.
That’s all bad news for the declinists
who enjoy putting California down even while it pulls itself back up toward the
golden stature it long enjoyed.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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