Quote from dcvtss:
This is an interesting thread, I moved from Maryland to Austin, TX last year and a couple of observations. First as someone mentioned earlier the top talent, especially in IT definitely heads to Silicon Valley. Austin tech companies aren't able to retain any of UT's (one of the original public ivies) top tech talent, they all head to Cali, and it's not like Austin is a terrible place to live.
You are spot on with your observation that the nicest area of Texas have the highest tax rates, it's easy to correlate in TX because it is all property taxes, there's a map out there somewhere with property tax rates and the highest are in the 3 major cities and drilling down further the nice areas have higher rates. The rates are generally high compared to other states, one benefit of this however is it acts as resistance against housing bubbles.
I also agree that tax rates are not as big a factor in personal and corporate movement as is commonly thought, but living in the DC area proved to me that it is a factor, and when other things like distance are held relatively constant the lower tax area does win out. Just about every major company opening or moving operations to DC chooses Virginia.