California Lost $102 Billion in Income Due to Migration of Taxpayers, Tax Data Shows

More than $102 billion in income left California from 2020 to 2022 as people migrated to other states, according to IRS data cited in a July 31 report from the Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO).

“The number of taxpayers who move out of California each year ticked up in 2020 with the beginning of the pandemic,” the report noted. “At the same time, the number of taxpayers who moved to California remained flat. Recently released IRS taxpayer data from 2021 and 2022 shows this trend has continued. As a result, annual net outmigration to other states nearly doubled – from about 170,000 people (taxpayers and their dependents) in 2019 to closer to 300,000 people – since the pandemic began. The state has long had annual net domestic outmigration, but the recent migration gap is now as large as the early 1990s gap that occurred when defense and aerospace contractors downsized after the end of the Cold War.”

In the years leading up to the pandemic, foregone state personal income tax collections associated with net outmigration reflected about 0.5 percent of total PIT revenue each year, the report stated.“

As of 2022, foregone tax collections due to net outmigration was 1.6 percent of 2022-23 PIT revenue, three times higher (or about 1 percentage point) than pre-pandemic levels,” the LAO wrote. “Foregone revenue increased more (three-fold) than net domestic outmigration of people (two-fold) because, prior to the pandemic, outmigration was concentrated among lower-income households. Since then, more middle- and higher-income households have moved to other states, meaning the effect on state revenue has been greater because these tax filers tend to make larger income tax payments.

”California income tax revenue declined 27 percent in 2022-23, but the loss attributed to outmigration “likely was only a small contributor to the large revenue losses,” the LAO stated.

“Although net outmigration was only a small contributor to revenue decline seen in 2022-23 and subtracts only a small portion of total revenue in any given year, ongoing outmigration of at this level would be a drag on long-term revenue growth for the state,” the LAO added. “Over the last few years, outmigration has been a drag on PIT revenue growth of about 1 percent per year. This is nontrivial when compared to the long-term average growth rate of PIT revenue – 7 percent per year. Looking ahead, should the heightened trend of net outmigration continue, it could drag PIT revenue growth below its long-term average. That being said, migration patterns are extremely difficult to predict. While it is possible the recent shift could represent a ‘new normal,’ there is also a good possibility it will be temporary. In the past, migration has been marked by cyclical ups and downs, with large spikes in outmigration fading after a few years.”

The IRS tracks the adjusted gross income of taxpayers who move each year. The net flow of taxpayer income from California since 2020 “has been concentrated in Southern states” – primarily Texas ($14 billion), Florida ($8 billion), and Tennessee ($3 billion) – and neighboring Western states, the analyst reported. Nevada gained $10 billion in income from former Californians, Arizona gained $7 billion, and Oregon gained $3 billion, the data shows.

Source: https://lao.ca.gov/LAOEconTax/Article/Detail/809
Source: Snodgrass Micheli