Monday, April 13, 2015

Seeking Tax Havens

Stephen Moore writes for The Washington Times about middle class people fleeing high tax states.
California is the prototypical example. It has the highest tax rates of any state. It has very generous welfare benefits. Many of its cities have a high minimum wage. But day after day, the middle class keeps leaving. The wealthy areas such as San Francisco and the Silicon Valley boom. Yet the state has nearly the highest poverty rate in the nation. The Golden State, alas, has become the inequality state.

We find that five of the highest-tax blue states in the nation — California, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Illinois — lost some 4 million more U.S. residents than entered these states over the last decade (see chart). Meanwhile, the big low-tax red states — Texas, Florida, North Carolina, Arizona and Georgia — gained about this many new residents.
The truly rich don't sweat state taxes, and the poor don't much pay them. Us in the middle pay them and suffer, or migrate to low tax states. Millions of us have chosen the latter route.