California's bond rating is the country's  lowest. The state faces near unprecedented unemployment and underemployment.  State government and most counties face deficits for the foreseeable  future. The solution to this predicament, some Sacramento politicians  believe, is more taxes.
The underlying assumption of such an  approach is that taxes don't have much impact on economic performance  and that tax competition among states is irrelevant. But both matter  a great deal and lie at the heart of why the state's economy is struggling.
 
The first faulty premise pervading Sacramento  is that taxes don't influence economic decisions and performance. Volumes  of research show how taxes change behavior and how they affect the economy.
 
When we tax something, we get less of  it. In other words, much of the foundation for a prosperous society,  like work effort, savings, investment and entrepreneurship, is influenced  by taxes. Unfortunately, California has gone out of its way to tax these  very things.