![]() California export growth trailing our largest competitorPosted by Gino DiCaro, Vice President, Communications on Feb. 14, 2013This week, CMTA President Jack Stewart participated in a California exports and manufacturing panel at the Southern California Advanced Manufacturing Expo. To prepare we compared the state's exports with our largest competitor over the last decade. Texas passed us for the first time back in 2002 and they haven't looked back since. In fact their exports have grown by 144 percent while we have lagged at 33 percent growth.
0 comments | Post your comment Texas Trip Confirms: California Needs a Plan to Create JobsPosted by Jack Stewart, President on April 19, 2011California has an unemployment rate of 12 percent, lost 11,600 jobs last month and has no plan for creating jobs for the more than two million California workers who are looking for work. Texas has an unemployment rate of 8.1 percent, created 37,200 jobs last month and has an aggressive plan for investment and job creation.
The big take-away from the two days in Austin was the commitment Texas has to providing a positive business climate for its employers and to creating job opportunities for its workers. That commitment appears to start with Governor Rick Perry, who prides himself in saying, “creating and growing employers is his number one job – with a healthy, growing economy other problems become less daunting.”
This is not to say Texas has all the answers or that California doesn’t have its own set of attributes, but the fact is California’s business climate is very unpredictable and investors shy away from unpredictability. Texas places a high premium on a predictable business climate and investors seem to agree. 0 comments | Post your comment In the spirit of TexasPosted by Gino DiCaro, Vice President, Communications on April 15, 2011This week CMTA president Jack Stewart participated in an economic fact finding trip to Texas with California Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, Assembly Minority leader Connie Conway, Assemblyman Dan Logue and others to gather information about the Lone Star state's private sector job growth. For perspective, below is Texas' impressive job growth over the last decade contrasted with California's large decline.
View Texas Governor Rick Perry on growing jobs with a competitive and predictable business environment: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXZVgitUI7c There is more to come on the overall trip and findings from our attending manufacturing leader, Jack Stewart, but his Fox Business News interview from this morning will post here: http://www.foxbusiness.com/watch/fox-business/. 0 comments | Post your comment CMTA's MPowered blog has taken off in Texas!Posted by Gino DiCaro, Vice President, Communications on March 30, 2011
Tags: economic recovery Texas
0 comments | Post your comment Why not California #15 - More solar manufacturing lossesPosted by Gino DiCaro, Vice President, Communications on Jan. 6, 2011Add another big loss to the mounting list of solar start-ups that opt to manufacture their product outside of California. This week, Stion Solar Panels announced it would build it's manufacturing plant in Hattiesburg, Mississippi after getting a $75 million loan from the state and citing lower wages and a more trainable workforce. (CORRECTION: This sentence reads as if California provided the $75 million loan. It was Mississippi that provided the loan.) California's inability to manufacture it's home grown innovations continues to play out against its own economy and workers. Let's face it, without manufacturing, innovation is just a good idea. California has a tremendous market and we have cutting-edge research & development. We don't, however, have a competitive environment to make our products and employ thousands of workers. And it seems to be getting worse, not better. The approximate 200 to 300 high-wage jobs that the Mississippi solar plant will produce in 2011 (1,000 by 2017) would have been a blessing to some of the 2.2 million unemployed Californians and a boon to state revenues. More intriguing is the announcement from many states this month that they should and would more actively recruit companies from California, citing the difficult business climate. Add Mississipi to the list of states taking advantage of California's woes. 1 comments | Post your comment View next 5 entries |