ÃÛÌÒ½´dean says much of California's loss is Texas' gain
Albert Niemi, dean of SMU's Cox School of Business and an expert on why businesses leave states, says California is the next Michigan.
Al Niemi, dean of Cox School of Business at ÃÛÌÒ½´Methodist University, is an expert on why businesses leave states.
He sees California as the next Michigan.
"Over the past 30 years, Michigan pretty much lost the auto and truck industry to the Sun Belt. When Honda, Toyota, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai and other international competitors came to the U.S., they almost exclusively chose Sun Belt locations," he says.
"The same thing is now happening to California." And this time, companies are beating a path to Texas.
Niemi cites a study done by Bain & Co. a few years ago that surveyed the CEOs of all companies headquartered in California.
"Forty percent said they were making plans to leave the state," Niemi says. "Of those planning to leave, 35 percent said they would likely move offshore to find cheaper labor, 36 percent said they were planning to move to Texas and the remaining 29 percent said they would relocate somewhere else in the U.S."
If you compare Texas to California and places in the Northeast like New York, the only comparable factors are quality of life and global airport connections, he says. In everything else, Texas, and D-FW in particular, wins.
"When you compare the cost of doing business in Texas with California and New York, it is a no-brainer – you move to Texas," he says.
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