I’m a big fan of federalism because states have the flexibility to choose good policy or bad policy.
And that’s good news for me since I get to write about the consequences.
One of the main lessons we learn (see here, here, here, here, and here) is that high-earning taxpayers tend to migrate from states with onerous tax burdens and they tend to land in places where there is no state income tax (we also learn that welfare recipients move to states with bigger handouts, but that’s an issue for another day).
In this interview with Stuart Varney, we discuss whether this trend of tax-motivated migration is going to accelerate.
I mentioned in the interview that restricting the state and local tax deduction is going to accelerate the flight from high-tax states, which underscores what I wrote earlier this year about that provision of the tax bill being a “big [expletive deleted] deal.”
I suggested that Stuart create a poll on which state will be the first to go bankrupt.
And there’s a lot of data to help people choose.
Freedom in the 50 States.
- Death Spiral states.
- State spending growth.
- Welfare generosity.
- State tax burden.
- State Business Tax Climate.
- State Fiscal Report Card.
- Bureaucrat pension liabilities.
- Even my Moocher Index.
Technically, I don’t think bankruptcy is even possible since there’s no provision for such a step in federal law.
But it’s still an interesting issue, so I decided to create a poll on the question. To make it manageable, I limited the selection to 10 states, all of which rank poorly in one of more of the surveys listed above. And, to avoid technical quibbles, the question is about “fiscal collapse” rather than bankruptcy, default, or bailouts. Anyhow, as they say in Chicago, vote early and vote often.
P.S. I asked a similar question about bankruptcies in developed nations back in 2011. Back then, it appeared Portugal might be the right answer. Today, I’d pick Italy.
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People who should know better like The Cato Institute give America’s Wang an “A” on fiscal matters, but I don’t get it…In addition to “Enterprise Florida” (because you see it’s ‘GOOD’ if REPUBLICANS get to pick winners & losers in the “free” market!) and “Visit Florida” (because handing a MILLION TAX DOLLARS to a rapper I’d never-heard-of named “Pitbull” is somehow going to make tourists visit!). I sh!t you not, I am not making ANY of this up!!!
And beyond THAT is hidden a stadium-welfare program, because teams worth MORE than a billion dollars like the Atlanta Braves “need” tax money to move Spring Training facilities. I tag normally-intelligent people who shoulda noticed this BS like David Boaz & I get no responses. I think it’s because they know I’m right, but for some reason people REALLY want Governor Skeletor to become SENATOR Skeletor, so logical stuff about fiscal problems gets blithely-ignored.
Yes, I know the incumbent Democrat sucks too. I’m likely to write-in Vermin Supreme instead of voting for either one. But PLEASE, don’t try to pretend FL is all that when it comes to fiscal health. We’re not. Dammit.
[…] Reprinted from International Liberty. […]
@smapple: A term for that is “ruin voting” and it needs to be more widely discussed.
Venezuela has a lot of natural wealth too…
the problem with this map is it scares me. We have noted that people who move to, for instance, Austin Texas bring their voting patterns with them. So, having ruined one state, and leaving it poor and unlivable, they move to the next one and try the same thing. Like locusts leaving a field they have picked bare. The definition of insanity is doing the same thin g over and over, and expecting a different result.
It won’t be California — the state has too much natural wealth. Everything else being equal (it isn’t right now), people WANT to live there. Climate, technology, geography — it has a lot going for it.
The toxic government is largely the product of affluent people not paying attention. As things get more dire, there is some hope for change.
Illinois, New Jersey, Connecticut,OTOH, have nothing unique.
Great article. What is accelerating the process more; especially in states like California, is that taxpayers who leave are being replaced with non taxpayers. This puts a higher burden on those who didn’t leave, and increases the money needed for social services. It’s only a matter of time before many of these states start falling like dominoes.