Posted on 12/26/2019 11:58:26 AM PST by Kaslin
As reported by the LA Times, according to data recently released by the Department of Finance, Californias population growth rate for the year ending July 1, 2019, was the lowest the state has experienced since 1900. Estimates indicate the Golden States population grew by 0.35 percent over the course of the year (or by 141,000 people), down from 0.57 percent for the previous year ending July 1, 2018.
Californias growth in population was buoyed by the net difference between births and deaths in the state, which amounted to 180,800 people. However, this number was tempered by net losses in migration, which indicate more people are exiting the state than entering it.
While international migration or legal immigration into the state added to Californias population, there was significant negative domestic migration or rather, people leaving California for other states amounting to nearly 40,000 residents. According to the Department of Finance, this phenomenon represents the first time since the 2010 census that California has had more people leaving the state than moving in from abroad or other states.
But where are these people going? According to William Frey of Brookings Institution, theyre heading elsewhere in the West to places economies are picking up, housing costs are cheaper, and there may be no state income tax. According to Frey, the most popular destinations were Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, Oregon, Texas, and Washington.
Immigration levels are also declining, which accounts for some of Californias drop in population growth. In the past, California would be growing because immigration would counteract domestic outmigration, Frey told the LA times. The outmigration is in places where housing prices are high and therefore immigration is not being able to counter that.
Dowell Myers, a demographics expert at USC, told the LA Times that California housing prices are preventing millennials from really establishing the requisite nest needed to have kids. He pointed to the shortage of housing choking the supply.
I think we need to have enough housing for workers to live in and for people to start families. Older people have the right to stay in their houses, but we need to make room for the young people or else we will turn into a retirement city by the sea, Myers explained. He pointed to LA County as an example, given it experienced a 17 percent decline in the amount of children residing in the area over the last 10 years.
As noted here, Californias housing woes, particularly in its major cities, are further exacerbated by zoning laws that restrict builders to building only a certain type of housing in a large proportion of the city. In San Francisco, for instance, in nearly three-quarters of privately held land, builders are not permitted to build anything but single-family homes or duplexes.
Theres also the issue of regulation. In cities such as San Francisco, the planning code is an unwieldy mess, adding years of angst to the building process. For instance, even procuring approval for a multi-unit building project can take twice as long in San Francisco as in other districts. In result, theres now a cottage industry in San Francisco of flipping entitlements (or approval to build) on purchased land, meaning many are scooping up property with no intention of building.
But perhaps the biggest culprit of ensuring housing stocks will stay low and housing costs high is the policy much-loved by economically ignorant Democrats, the ever-infamous rent control.
Indeed, there are few notions in economics that receive near-universal consensus from economists, and the principle that rent control strangles housing markets is one of them.
As I explained prior in opposition to Bernie Sanders endorsement of nationwide rent-control:
Once a price cap is established, it becomes harder for landlords to justify investing in upkeep of their properties if they dont get to see reward from such efforts in the form of being able to charge higher rent. In the more extreme cases, the inability to charge market prices compels landlords to pull their properties from the market. This pressure on landlords has a two-prong effect over time: It reduces both the quality of the current supply and the quantity of current supply.
In other words, rent control kills the supply of the housing market while encouraging increased demand as a result of overpromising affordable housing. A recent study by Rebecca Diamond, Tim McQuade, and Franklin Qian of Stanford University was performed on the expansion of rent control in the 1990s in San Francisco. Unsurprisingly, the trio found that rent control significantly diminished the available rental housing supply.
For instance, the study noted a 10 percent increase in the conversions of housing from rental to owner-occupied (i.e., converting an apartment into a condominium), as well as a 25 percent drop in the number of renters living in rent-controlled apartments. In other words, expanding rent control policies decreases the number of people who actually are subjected to it or benefitting from it.
In Californias major cities, the rent control rates are staggering. In San Francisco, nearly two-thirds of the rental housing market is rent-controlled, while in Los Angeles, close to 80 percent of rental housing units are rent-controlled. If housing prices are the scapegoat for net migration losses, it seems rent control isnt achieving its purported purpose.
Lastly, while there is no metric to measure the overall quality of life in Californias major cities, its worth noting that Californias homelessness problem, which is intimately tied to the housing crisis and to lax enforcement of city laws, has created looming quality of life issues for Californians.
According to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, homelessness in California rose by 16.4 percent or by 21,306 people in 2019 alone. In Los Angeles County, the homeless population increased to 60,000 people. And these numbers can hugely affect the quality of life of those living in the area, which is no doubt reduced by increased theft, the need to sidestep human feces, and increased public use of drugs.
In fact, the LA Times conducted a poll last month finding that 95 percent of voters felt homelessness to be Los Angeles biggest problem, despite a sales tax increase funneling billions of dollars to the issue. The New York Times recently referred to the overall backlash against the homeless problem as the liberal breaking point, given the states notorious left-leaning bend.
Enforcing vagrancy laws already on the books and enforcing penalties for possession of Schedule I controlled substances may help to reduce the perception that Californias cities are conducive to homelessness. As noted by the magazine Cal Matters, homelessness numbers indicate that the vast majority of the states homeless population does not utilize temporary living arrangements provided by either charitable organizations or government programs. Rather, [the homeless] have been found living on the streets, parks, or other places not meant for human habitation.
When I lived in San Francisco, I witnessed children in the Tenderloin neighborhood picking their way over needles to get to elementary school. It seems if California wants to keep its residents, it needs to increase incentives and foster a state where people would actually like to raise children.
Erielle Davidson is a Staff Writer at the Federalist and a law student at Georgetown University Law Center. Find her on Twitter at @politicalelle.
The lack of pop growth in CA might also be an indicator that “The Wall” is working as intended.
For the last decade or so, CA’s pop growth has been primarily welfare class looking for easier grift and illegals.
Had a lot of growth in homeless.
On no. Gavin Nobrain says these problems are the Federal Government’s, i.e. Republicans’ fault.
The POOP growth is reducing the pop growth in Kalifornia.
I guess they'll have to import more Mesoamericans.
The POOP growth is reducing the pop growth in Kalifornia.
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Or, the poop growth is an expected product of the quality of pop growth in Kalifornia.
Sounds like the federal government should step in and fix it!
Uh, “starter homes” at $1.5 million in the Bay Area and traffic saturation 24/7 pretty much explains the outmigration, in addition to the IN-migration of the entire nations of India and China in addition to the ever expanding Mexicans.
It ain’t America here no more. The rest of the country should just refuse to seat any politicians from CA in the Congress, 90% of them have no connection to the United States.
In fact, the LA Times conducted a poll last month finding that 95 percent of voters felt homelessness to be Los Angeles biggest problem, despite a sales tax increase funneling billions of dollars to Eric Garcetti's re-election fund.
Fixed it.
There’s not much good coming from California anyway.
Either way, the one definite positive about selling our Silicon Valley house last year that we owned for 23 years (on top of the 9 years for the Silicon Valley house we owned prior to that) is we cashed out for far more than I ever imagined. We ended up with some pretty nasty Federal and California capital gains tax bills for 2018 on the house sale, but a first world problem to be sure.
Last I looked on sites like Zillow, the house we sold in September 2018 is valued about 5% less than the selling price.
CA has 20 million people too many as it is. They want it to get smaller.
They moved to, polluted and corrupted, civilized states. And we don't like them. They smell bad and are simply stupid.
Conservatives in California should forget to fill out the census. Reduce the Representatives by 40% and send them to red states
L8r
Illegal Alien population is NOT being counted ??
The policies followed in California are NOT ignorant. They are perverse but the rulers there know what they are doing. Calling them ignorant is displaying a misunderstanding of the Communist project.
This is a NON-ISSUE....they will just let in or ‘import’ more illegal immigrants yo...../s
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