If the city is so friendly to businesses then why did Fidelity move the majority of their company to North Carolina especially when the Johnsons have lived in Mass most of their lives.
Riff -- slow down -- you are getting a bit better:
But -- you and others are still misssing the key:
Greater Boston, Massachussetts and increasingly the US -- Is not friendly toward business -- due to out political lack of leadership -- when business is successful here- abouts it is not because of -- BUT rather inspite of the local and state and Federal political hacks
For example while keeping the core on Devonshire St. and key IT operations in the SPID -- Fidelity moved a lot of back-office ops out of Marlboro that can't be justified due to the high operating costs imposed by excessive taxes and regulations
On the other hand -- if you can justify an HQ or R&D center versus the high costs -- i.e. you need the access to the high priced talent that can produce you high returns -- then this is the place you want to locate. Thus you have not just start-ups but globally dominant players moving into Greater Boston their HQ's and R&D centers while the local companies move the back-office, manufacturing, distribution, etc -- out of state or out of Greater Boston
For a partial list of major players moving in to Greater Boston in the past 2 decades:
1) Novartis, Pfizer, Merk in pharma;
2) Google, Amazon, SAP, Oracle in Software / IT / Web
3) HP. Intel in traditional high tech;
4) BNY Mellon in Finance;
5) Schlumberger in Energy -- etc.