My old high school, the
South Carolina Governor's School for Science and Math (SCGSSM), sent out a survey to understand what it would take to get more of its alumni to live and work in the state.
I think there are a lot of serious structural issues with SC that make it virtually impossible for me to live there. To a large extent, SCGSSM is a victim of its own success. Here, we have a fantastic, top-caliber high school that has trained scholars who can operate on the world stage. In my graduating class, there is a speechwriter for a politician, several lawyers, multiple doctors, and a large number of teachers.
The problem is that many of these top-notch jobs simply aren't in SC. SC doesn't have a thriving high-tech, biotech, financial, or engineering base. It's simply dominated by Atlanta to the west, and North Carolina to the north. The same is true for its universities. God bless Clemson's football team, but the universities in SC can't compete at the international level, let alone the regional level. For engineering and computer science, the region is dominated by Georgia Tech, Duke, and VA Tech. These factors put SC at a tremendous competitive disadvantage.
While I loved growing up in Charleston, and while I fondly reminisce about my time at SCGSSM, I just don't see a good way forward for my home state. The problems it faces are ones that will take 50-100 years to fix, and that's only if there is the political willpower and vision to carry it out.