Good news is international flights are coming.
But Oklahoma being the republican state that it is and higher taxes not being the conservatives favorite thing in the world, one would think it shouldn't be that hard to remove the income tax.
And yeah I am sure Texas having a sh!t ton of money has a little to do with it as well. But are they just throwing money at these corporations? Like Space X and Chevron. Were they given money from the state to relocate their HQ there? It seems to me they just fled Cali and unlike the Amazon debacle where they were asking for huge incentives the other two companies I mentioned just dipped immediately. Both chose Texas.
i hear what you’re saying but there’s no way Chevron ever would’ve relocated here. They’ve had a huge office in Houston since their merger with Texaco in 2000, most of their operations were in Texas, offshore or international and they have few if any ties to Oklahoma or the mid-continent area. They had already spun off most of their upstream assets in California into a separate company (California Resources) five years ago and I’m frankly surprised they were still headquartered there at all given how horrendous their state government is from an business standpoint (especially for the oil and gas industry). It’s news worthy because it’s crazy that the former Standard Oil of California is leaving California but the announcement felt like a formality.
Yeah I’m not in the oil and gas industry, but I figured that Oklahoma would have a base on the moon before Chevron would relocate their HQ to OKC. I’m just saying with all these corporate relocations going to Texas. It would be nice if just one of them would come to Oklahoma. it’s just baffling to me how many corporate HQ’s are moving to Texas.
Agree about local companies and keeping growth organically with existing companies in Oklahoma. I also advocate growth from the outside with new companies bringing in new human capital, money, tax payers and new ideas. Oklahoma still depends on the O&G industry, however everyone knows it is a boom and bust mentality and unpredictable. If Oklahoma "truly" wanted to attract big companies they would "change" their business climate and value higher education.
Unlike other Texas cities, Austin has given inadequate and misguided attention to infrastructure to support their population - even before the spectacular population growth of the past 20 years. As an example, their city government, when looking at building rail public transportation, proposed almost laughable line routes - stopping short of major logical destinations - so citizens voted down the proposals. Now that the population has exploded, their infrastructure is woefully inadequate.
As often happens in wild construction sprees, they have seen some excess office space in but it's just a tech slowdown from insane growth rates to more normal rates.
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