The richest are voting with their feet. Chamath Palihapitiya flagged something pretty significant: roughly half a trillion dollars in wealth has bolted California in response to the wealth tax, and it's not a slow exodus. These high-net-worth individuals didn't just shuffle their portfolios—they actually relocated. The kicker? Palihapitiya warns this brain drain and capital flight will likely widen the state's budget deficit, not shrink it. It's a classic case of policy creating unintended consequences. When you squeeze the wealthy, they don't necessarily stay put and accept it. They leave, taking their tax base with them. Worth thinking about, especially if you're tracking where capital flows globally.
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CryptoComedian
· 13h ago
Laughing until crying, California's recent move can be called a textbook example of self-harm. Five trillion directly fleeing, this isn't a portfolio adjustment, it's literally turning around and walking away.
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ChainMelonWatcher
· 17h ago
That's why Silicon Valley tycoons are fleeing California... really, policy backlash.
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PositionPhobia
· 23h ago
This move in California is really shooting oneself in the foot... Half a trillion just ran away, and the fiscal deficit actually widened. This logic makes no sense.
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rug_connoisseur
· 01-03 08:00
Ha, it's that California style again. The wealthy fleeing has been happening for a long time. Now you're just talking about 500 billion? I don't believe a word of it.
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SerumSquirter
· 01-03 07:59
The wealthy fleeing is really unbelievable. Half a trillion dollars evaporated in California. This tax policy truly is shooting oneself in the foot.
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ForkTongue
· 01-03 07:58
California's move is truly brilliant—$500 billion in withdrawals, and you still want to rely on this to fill the gap? Wake up.
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ChainMaskedRider
· 01-03 07:56
California's move this time really backfired; they wanted to fleece users, but all the wool ran away haha...
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BlockchainWorker
· 01-03 07:31
California's recent move is truly brilliant; instead of cutting the leeks, they ended up scaring away the landlords. LOL.
The richest are voting with their feet. Chamath Palihapitiya flagged something pretty significant: roughly half a trillion dollars in wealth has bolted California in response to the wealth tax, and it's not a slow exodus. These high-net-worth individuals didn't just shuffle their portfolios—they actually relocated. The kicker? Palihapitiya warns this brain drain and capital flight will likely widen the state's budget deficit, not shrink it. It's a classic case of policy creating unintended consequences. When you squeeze the wealthy, they don't necessarily stay put and accept it. They leave, taking their tax base with them. Worth thinking about, especially if you're tracking where capital flows globally.