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Elon Musk predicts Austin, Texas, will be 'the biggest boomtown that America has seen in 50 years'

Tim Levin   

Elon Musk predicts Austin, Texas, will be 'the biggest boomtown that America has seen in 50 years'
  • Elon Musk thinks Austin, Texas, is the next big thing, he said.
  • The city will be the "biggest boomtown" the US has had in 50 years, he said on Joe Rogan's podcast.
  • The Tesla CEO moved to Texas after spats with California's public-health officials.

It's no secret that Tesla CEO Elon Musk is over California.

Last summer, Musk $4 as the spot for the $1 billion factory that would build the $4, the carmaker's long-awaited electric pickup truck. And in December, he $4 that he was picking up and moving from Los Angeles to the Lone Star State.

During an $4$4, Musk said he thought Austin had huge potential beyond just hosting him and his new factory.

"It's going to be the biggest boomtown that America has seen in 50 years, at least - megaboom," Musk said.

The CEO said Tesla chose Austin as the spot for the carmaker's next US plant because "Austin is a bit like mini California." According to Musk, he asked Tesla's team in California what its top choice would be for a new factory - where it would like to spend time - and the "No. 1 choice was Austin."

Read more: $4

Musk announced his move to Texas after public spats in 2020 with California's public-health officials over COVID-19 restrictions that temporarily shuttered Tesla's Fremont, California, plant.

"Tesla will now move its HQ and future programs to Texas/Nevada immediately," he $4 in May during a disagreement with local officials.

During a call with investors in April, Musk $4 criticizing California's shelter-in-place measures as "fascist" and saying that officials were "forcibly imprisoning" people in their homes.

Looser government regulations in Texas - along with no state income tax - appear to be an incentive for Musk's move. But the billionaire said the $4 should take care not to change the city too much.

"I think we do need to make sure that ... people who move here from California don't inadvertently recreate the issues that caused them to move in the first place," Musk said during Thursday's interview.

An increasing number of business leaders and companies have moved out of traditional hubs like Silicon Valley to Texas, as the pandemic has forced many people to work remotely.

Late last year, the software giant Oracle said it would $4 from California to Austin. The Information reported Dropbox CEO Drew Houston was moving to the city as well, and Palantir cofounder Joe Lonsdale said he would move his venture capital firm, 8VC, there too.

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