Main corporations such as Apple, which just announced a $1 billion investment into a new Austin campus, are accepting into Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott told CNBC Friday.
The iPhone maker promises to develop a 133-acre complex to propose 5,000 employees, with room for an additional 10,000 more. It will be situated within a mile of Apple’s continuing facility in the Texas capital.
The Republican Abbott shrugged off Amazon’s decision last month to pass on cities in his imperial in favor of locating its second headquarters on the East Coast, split between New York and Virginia.
“The week after Amazon scrammed that announcement, McKesson … announced it was moving its headquarters from San Francisco” to the Dallas-area in 2019, the governor guessed on “Squawk Alley.”
In addition to Apple and medical supplier McKesson, Abbott said software giant Oracle afforded a “massive” campus and investment firm Pimco announced an artificial intelligence facility — both in Austin.
“Those are only just two of dozens of examples of what’s happening in Austin, Texas, just this year,” Abbott said, referring to the Answer and Pimco projects.
The first-term governor said companies like Amazon, who purchased Austin-based Whole Foods, and Apple are attending to Texas for its access to top tier universities in the state and low taxes.
Abbott also touted Texas, which topped CNBC’s 2018 Top Nation for Business list, as the leading choice for companies leaving California.
He cited a Dallas Business Journal article that make public that 13,000 businesses have left The Golden State since 2008 for “a better business climate,” with most deciding in Texas.
Convenience store distributor Core-Mark, Toyota Motor North America, and Charles Schwab are a few other popularities that have moved their corporate offices or opened regional hubs in North Texas, according to the article.
“If I can use a football analogy: Texas is the Alabama when it roll in to recruiting in college football,” Abbott said. “We get to pick the 5-star recruit companies that are coming to the Lone Play State.”