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If California Is Doing So Great, Why Are So Many Leaving?
The New Geography ^ | 12/14/2010 | Bill Watkins

Posted on 12/14/2010 7:34:50 AM PST by SeekAndFind

CAbeach.jpg

Superficially at least, California’s problems are well known. Are they well understood? Apparently not.

About a year ago Time ran an article, "Why California is Still America's future," touting California's future, a future that includes gold-rush-like prosperity in an environmentally pure little piece of heaven, brought to us by "public-sector foresight."

More recently, Brett Arends' piece at Market Watch, "The Truth About California," is more of the same. California's governor elect, Jerry Brown, liked this piece so much that he tweeted a link to it.

The optimist’s argument about California’s future ultimately hinges on the creativity of the state’s vaunted tech sector, in large part driven by regulation promulgated by an enlightened political class and funded by a powerful venture capital sector.

No fundamentalist evangelical speaks with more conviction or faith than a California cheerleader expounding on the economic benefits of environmental purity brought about by command and control regulation.

The more honest cheerleaders acknowledge that California has challenges, including persistent budget problems. Arends denies even the existence of a budget problem, demanding "Er, no, actually. It’s your assertion. You do the math." Let me help you, Brett. The non-partisan California Legislative Analyst's Office has done the math. You can find it here. They expect budget shortfalls in excess of $20 billion a year throughout their forecast horizon. This is on annual revenues of less than $100 billion.

Last week the numbers got even worse, as the Governor-elect, Jerry Brown, acknowledged. The deficit may now be as much as $28 billion this year, and over $20 billion for the foreseeable future. This is more than a nuisance. There’s a reason, after all, why California has among the worst credit ratings of any state.

Most people outside of California haven't drank from this vat of the economic equivalent of LSD-laced Kool-Aid. People know that a state is in trouble when it has persistent intractable budget deficits, chronic domestic net out-migration, and 30 percent higher unemployment than the national average. Indeed, California’s joblessness, chronic budget deficits, governors, and credit rating have made the state the butt of jokes worldwide.

How bad are things in California? California's domestic migration has been negative every year since at least 1990. In fact, since 1990, according to the U.S. Census, 3,642,490 people, net, have left California. If they were in one city, it would be the third largest city in America, with a population 800,000 more than Chicago and within 200,000 of Los Angeles’ population.

We’re seeing a reversal of the depression-era migration from the Dust Bowl to California. While California has seen 3.6 million people leave, Texas has received over 1.4 million domestic migrants. Even Oklahoma and Arkansas have had net-positive domestic migration trends from California.

Those ultimate canaries in the coal mine, illegal immigrants, recognize California's problems. Twenty years ago, about half of all United States illegal immigrants went to California. Today, that’s down to about one in four.

The result of these migration trends is that California's share of the United States population has been declining.

What do these migrants see that so many of California's political class do not see? They see a lack of opportunity. California's share of United States jobs and output has declined since 1990, and its unemployment rate has remained persistently above the United States Average, only approaching the average during the housing boom.

California's unemployment is particularly troubling. As of October 2010, only two states, Nevada at 14.2 percent and Michigan at 12.8 percent, had higher unemployment rates than California's 12.4 percent. California's unemployment problem is particularly severe in its more rural counties. Twenty-five of California's 58 counties have unemployment rates higher than Nevada's:



These unemployment rates approach depression levels. Some will excuse many of them because they are in agricultural areas, but many assert that low Midwest unemployment rates are due to a booming agricultural sector. Which one is it?

California's unemployment problems are not limited to rural and agricultural areas. Most of Riverside County's population is very urban, yet the County's unemployment rate is 14.87 percent. On December 7th, the Wall Street Journal listed the unemployment rates for 49 of America's largest urban regions. California had six of the 19 metro areas with double-digit unemployment. These include such major cities San Diego, San Jose, and Los Angeles.

Just as rural areas are not California's only depressed areas, agriculture is not California's only ailing sector. From 2000 to 2009, the only California sectors to gain jobs were government, education and health services, and leisure and hospitality.

California's cheerleaders claim that the state's future is assured by a vibrant tech sector, but the data do not support that assertion. North Dakota's Praxis Strategy Group has performed analysis by job skills. They compare Scientific, Technical, Engineering, and Math (STEM) jobs across states. Their analysis shows that California is the Nation's ninth worst state in creating STEM jobs in post dot-com-bust years. It has produced far fewer new tech jobs than Texas, and far less on average, than the country over the past decade:



In this respect, California's precipitous decline is really quite shocking. In just a couple of decades, California has gone from being America's economic star, a destination for ambitious people from around the world and abundant with opportunity, to home of some of America's most distressed communities. It has been a man-made, slow motion tragedy perpetuated by a political class that is largely deluded.

The cheerleader’s faith in command and control regulation and environmental purity is so strong they cannot see anything that contradicts that faith.

But that faith is misplaced. Joel Kotkin, Zina Klapper, and I performed an extensive review of the economic impacts of one of California's most important greenhouse gas regulation, AB 32, and found that command and control regulation in general and AB 32 in particular is inefficient, cost jobs, and depress economic activity. California's Legislative Analyst's Office agrees, as evidenced by this report.

More depressing still are the growing ranks of what could be called “the resigned”. They simply have given up. These include a business leadership that is more interested in survival and accommodation than pushing an agenda for growth. Easier to get along here, and expand jobs and opportunities elsewhere, whether in other states or overseas.

Yet ultimately California’s future is what Californians make of it. No place on Earth has more natural amenities or a more benevolent climate. No place has a location more amenable to prosperity, located between thriving Pacific Rim economies and the entire North American market. No place has more economic potential.

But unless policy is changed, California's future is dismal, with the specter of stubbornly high unemployment, limited opportunity, and the continued exodus of the middle class. California's political class needs first to confront reality before we can hope to avoid a dismal future.

Bill Watkins is a professor at California Lutheran University and runs the Center for Economic Research and Forecasting, which can be found at clucerf.org.

Photo by Stuck in Customs



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: california; exodus
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To: central_va
Also, we keep our women barefoot and pregnant, wear overalls, We chew tobacco while carrying double barrel shotguns, and have no teeth. It is an EVIL place.

I have an uncle that retired in Los Angeles, sold his house, made a bundle of money, moved back to Arkansas and has a nice little nest egg.

41 posted on 12/14/2010 8:33:05 AM PST by seemoAR
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To: NeverForgetBataan
In North Texas we have a very short and mild winter.

I don't know what you consider "North Texas", but I grew up outside of Amarillo, and wouldn't describe the winters there as mild. We'd get some terrific blizzards in the Panhandle nearly every winter; the explanation, as the saying went, was that the only thing between Amarillo and the arctic circle was a couple of barbed wire fences.

42 posted on 12/14/2010 8:33:22 AM PST by Spartan79 (Malo periculosam libertatem quam quietam servitutem.)
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To: SeekAndFind
You’re not going to get the nice, balmy California weather there, that’s for sure... just sayin’ ...

I won't get the San Bernardino County "holy cow, please crank up the a/c" summers either...all in all, a fair trade.

43 posted on 12/14/2010 8:35:54 AM PST by JRios1968 (What is the difference between 0bama and his dog, Bo? Bo has papers.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Forbes did a neat interactive calendar a while back which graphically illustrates California’s outmigration. Load it and click on Los Angeles County to see an explosion of red lines representing outmigration, much of it to Texas, as well as some inmigration from the northeast: http://www.forbes.com/2010/06/04/migration-moving-wealthy-interactive-counties-map.html


44 posted on 12/14/2010 8:36:31 AM PST by Spartan79 (Malo periculosam libertatem quam quietam servitutem.)
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To: SeekAndFind
No place on Earth has more natural amenities or a more benevolent climate.

Why do people keep saying that? What a load of horsepucky.

45 posted on 12/14/2010 8:39:43 AM PST by Seruzawa (If you agree with the French raise your hand - If you are French raise both hands.)
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To: Spartan79

“the only thing between Amarillo and the arctic circle was a couple of barbed wire fences”
________________________________________________________________________

HaHa. That’s prety good. No, I don’t consider Amarillo in “North Texas”, although technically speaking it is. We Texans know that’s the Panhandle.

Public Service Announcement:

Attention all Californians... Do not move to the Texas Panhandle. Severe frostbite possible.


46 posted on 12/14/2010 8:41:34 AM PST by NeverForgetBataan (To the German Commander: ..........................NUTS !)
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To: NeverForgetBataan

I’d have to agree about the over-hyped weather. I’m a Southerner (by the grace of God) who’s been living in the San Francisco bay area for three years now. I’d take Texas weather 365 days a year over CA weather. People mistakenly think CA is balmy, but it’s downright cold here!

We moved here for my job, but we’re disgusted by the politics and incompetence of everyone around us. We’re definitely considering TX when we join th others and make our exodus.


47 posted on 12/14/2010 8:58:24 AM PST by kayemmbee
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To: Ev Reeman
California now finds itself in the same boat as Michigan

Except, Michigan has now gone from a blue state to a red state. Its turnaround will be much faster paced then California.

48 posted on 12/14/2010 9:03:06 AM PST by CharacterCounts (November 4, 2008 - the day America drank the Kool-Aid)
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To: Ev Reeman
California now finds itself in the same boat as Michigan

Except, Michigan has now gone from a blue state to a red state. Its turnaround will be much faster paced then California.

49 posted on 12/14/2010 9:03:28 AM PST by CharacterCounts (November 4, 2008 - the day America drank the Kool-Aid)
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To: kayemmbee

“We’re definitely considering TX when we join th others and make our exodus”
_________________________________________________________________________

Don’t go to Austin. It’s San Fran-weirdo Jr. Look at Plano, Allen & Frisco suburbs of Dallas.

Remember to write “GTT” on your door when you leave, as the Tennessee volunteers did in 1835. It means “gone to Texas”.


50 posted on 12/14/2010 9:09:48 AM PST by NeverForgetBataan (To the German Commander: ..........................NUTS !)
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To: PLD

Cal. IS a beautiful state but it’s hard to appreciate while sitting under a bridge eating dumpster food.


51 posted on 12/14/2010 9:15:41 AM PST by count-your-change (You don't have be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Tech firms are not like Steel Mills.
Tech is in the mind of the owner or employee.

Tech is VERY TRANSPORTABLE.

Steel mills —— not so much.

There is a large building in my area which was built to make building trusses just as the economy took a dive. I have heard it has about $12 million invested & is for sale for about $3 million.

It is within a 1/2 mile of the intersection of US Hwy 50 & US Hwy 95-A (Alternate).

The building is brand new. Large staging area for materials. Large parking lot. Small airport next door. 4200’ altitude. High dry desert. 4 seasons.

NO CORPORATE INCOME TAX.

No personal income tax.

Housing costs in a range of $100,000 up to $ 4 million within 50 miles radius.

I can get more specific information for anyone who might be interested in moving their operation to this location. There are some tax incentives also available from the county, I understand.

Lake Tahoe prox 60 miles away. Reno prox 50 miles away.


52 posted on 12/14/2010 9:38:23 AM PST by ridesthemiles
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To: marron

They also allowed the water to thousands of acres in the Central Valley to be turned off.

Those acres grow almost every kind of fresh vegetables & fruit that you can think of.

Mooooochelle NObama wants all our kids to have more such items on their school lunch counters, but her husband did nothing to prevent this shut off of the water.

Hundreds of farmers are going or have gone bankrupt.
That trickles down to the machinery dealers, truck dealers, property taxes, restaurants, truckers, retail stores, dentists, farm employees, even the porta-pottie supplier for the workers in the fields. Unemployment in that area is estimated at over 45%.

Neither California legislature nor Boxer nor Feinstein nor any of the Democrats did a single thing to stop such a monumentally stupid thing.


53 posted on 12/14/2010 9:44:20 AM PST by ridesthemiles
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To: SeekAndFind

My wealthy grandfather rented in California where he lived while maintaining his residence elsewhere for tax purposes.


54 posted on 12/14/2010 9:55:30 AM PST by Jim W N
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To: SeekAndFind

I can’t wait to leave this socialist cesspool of idiocracy. I was born and raised in San Francisco. It was bad enough watching that city go to hell in a handbasket, let alone the state. I spent 12 of the last 15 years living in the cith of San Francisco due to work, and it nearly had me on Xanax and Valium I was so depressed from the living conditions there. A conservative can’t mentally survive the experience.

It is probably a testament to my fortitude and strength that it took 9 years living through the communist looking glass before I lost it and went half mentally nuts. I was miserable - no I mean observably, measurably, depressingly miserable - for the last 3 years living there.

I thought the day I left I would be happy again. It has been 3 years since leaving San Francisco and I am still thawing out from it - still a bit down and not fully happy yet, even though I live in a very conservative little town.

I absolutly cannot wait to retire and get the hell out of this asinine, idiotic communist province. I want to return to the USA where I can be more free. Not that I will ever again have the freedom of my 60’s childhood...

I detest California. I can’t wait to get the hell out of here.


55 posted on 12/14/2010 10:52:47 AM PST by Freedom_Is_Not_Free (TSA apologists deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. END the TSA.)
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To: SeekAndFind

I left in 1995 and haven’t looked back. We took a hit on our house, but we have absolutely no regrets. Our kids have received a far better education than anything available from the very best So CA schools. Middle school and high school courses here are considered college level courses in CA. A neighbor came from El Toro/Saddleback area where he bragged about his honor roll student kids. They quickly became struggling C students here.

The state is a pit. Californians get what they deserve. Frickin unions and libs....

Back in the 1980’s there were two memorable bumper stickers that were pretty popular. They read:

“Welcome to California, now go home”

“When the last California native leaves, bring the flag.”


56 posted on 12/14/2010 11:16:33 AM PST by RacerXSpeedRacer (Republicans have another chance now..., they better deliver!)
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To: Freedom_Is_Not_Free
I lived in Palo Alto for 8 years in the 80’s and early 90’s. Left because our company could not survive in California.

I went back this year and did not recognize the place - the tech centers that were once full with waiting lists are like ghost towns. The Silicone Valley's tech juggernaut is beginning to hollow out by attrition due to out migration of skilled Tech talent and by crushing regulatory and tax burdens.

The fact of the matter is that in the Tech world, talent must be proximate to production. Manufacturing production is leaving Cali and the worker bee tech talent is following production to out of state or out of the country.

BTW, I was in Cali to de install manufacturing equipment that cannot be used for production profitably in California anymore and transport it out of state to set it up in a more business friendly state. At least we kept it from going to China or Asia where most of California's manufacturing base is being shipped to.

57 posted on 12/14/2010 2:58:20 PM PST by rdcbn
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To: central_va

You are so right on all points..Most of us don’t even have a TV no electric for lights, no running water we have to go to the creek for a bath and for our drinking water....have an outhouse for a bathroom..We get our meat from road kill we are lucky to find that..


58 posted on 12/14/2010 3:07:57 PM PST by PLD
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To: rdcbn

I didn’t realize it had gotten that bad. I knew Silicon Valley was down but didn’t realize it won’t recover.

I’m not terribly surprised. California politicians might as well be trying to destroy the state business climate, for all the damage they are doing.

Who would EVER want to start a business here when you can do so in a state where you can keep more of your labor? You would have to be insane to start a major operation in California when you have a myriad of options in other states.

This is California’s futures. Long slow slide into insolvency.


59 posted on 12/15/2010 6:17:59 AM PST by Freedom_Is_Not_Free (TSA apologists deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. END the TSA.)
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