Remix.run Logo
apercu 4 hours ago

Weirdly the first thing I thought was "Why Texas"?

mgh95 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Likely a combination of business-friendly policies (low tax, no employer payroll tax, etc.) and proximity to ports. Houston is the 6th [1] largest port in the USA.

[1] https://pangea-network.com/busiest-and-biggest-ports-in-the-...

dmix 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Apple also managed to build a Houston factory quickly there, it was announced in Feb 2025 and was starting production by August which is pretty impressive.

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/economy/article/ap...

apercu 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I agree with you on all of these except: low tax

I grew up in DFW.

My house in WI is assessed at a significantly higher value than my siblings house in Ft Worth.

My 2025 property tax bill ~$5k, my 2025 state income tax - not gonna publish it here but not all that significant.

Sibling in Texas property tax bill: ~$14k. Significantly higher than my state income tax + property tax.

Also, I don't have to live in Texas.

cloverich 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

I moved from TX to west coast a few years back. Property taxes down, all other taxes and expenses up; total cost of living much higher now. It's also business friendly enough to make deals on taxes as needed, I can't imagine that will be a problem. I get the hate on TX but tbh outside of the heat, it can be a pretty great place to live across many dimensions.

google234123 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Isn't this something where there is clear and easy to obtain aggregate data. What is the average tax burden for someone in Wi vs Tx instead of comparing a single data point from each? I have a feeling it's going to contradict you

ViscountPenguin 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Given that this is being done in large part to appease Trump the fact that it's a red state surely has something to do with it too.