CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 2023 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“TIRED OF DECLINISTS? SOME ENDURING
NEW CALIFORNIA POSITIVES”
California
has taken a beating lately, with (mostly Republican) governors of other states
blasting many aspects of life here, not to mention the state’s biggest-name
politicians.
They cite
everything from weak public schools to an upcoming ban on gasoline-powered cars
and high state income taxes as reasons to desert this state.
And
yet…No state has recovered faster from the COVID-19 pandemic and its blows to
employment, California unemployment having dropped in each of the last 11
months. Firefighters got the upper hand on last year’s ration of wildfires
quicker than ever, too. And for the 12th straight year, California
teams were in the Major League Baseball playoffs. Two teams, to be sure. Not to
mention the fact that a California school, USC, seems to have adjusted faster
and better than almost anyone else to the new financial scene in college
football.
Now come
two new realities that make this state look even better, despite having one
less member of Congress and one less electoral college vote than it did for the
last 20 years.
One is
verifiable economic information. While some forecasters see troubled financial
times ahead, and possibly a recession, the latest figures seem to belie that
pessimism.
This
state saw huge gains in leisure and hospitality revenue in 2021, whose figures have
only lately been reported, along with growth in industries like health care,
social services, technology, construction and defense spending.
This does
not even mention agriculture, where California remains America’s No. 1
food-producing state.
Despite
headwinds caused by lingering aspects of the pandemic that hurt tourism,
California posted America’s second-highest growth in gross domestic state
product (GDSP – the total of all goods and services produced in the state) in
the last quarter of 2021. Its 6.3 percent growth between pre-pandemic 2019 and
the first quarter of 2022 was beaten only by Washington state’s 6.9 percent.
By
contrast, Florida and Texas, whose governors often joust verbally with
California’s Gavin Newsom, all with an eye toward future White House
possibilities, checked in with GDSP growth of 5.3 percent and 3.9 percent
respectively.
For
California to better its prime challengers so soundly represented an unexpected
achievement, especially coming while it lost a small percentage of its populace
to each of those other two states.
California’s
natural advantages are one reason it does so well. No place enjoys a better
climate, with the ability to pursue a huge variety of activities in close
proximity to one another all year ‘round.
This
makes for strong tourism. The latest ranking from the home maintenance website
lawnstarter.com places California first among the states in the number of
scenic drives, from Highway 1 through Big Sur to state Highway 120 over Tioga
Pass into Yosemite National Park from the east to Redwood Highway 101 in the
state’s northwestern corner and the Monterey Peninsula’s 17-mile-drive.
California
is also No. 1 in number and scenic quality of national parks, including many
sizes and types from Lassen Volcanic to the southern desert’s Joshua Tree.
It’s also
first in attractions, including the likes of San Diego County’s Sea World and
Legoland, Anaheim’s Disneyland and San Francisco’s Fisherman’s Wharf. This list
does not even include Lake Tahoe and the Gold Rush country in the Sierra Nevada
foothills.
All those
places, drives and phenomena – and others too numerous to list – guarantee
large numbers of tourists each year there’s no major pandemic or world war.
That, in turn, ensures a healthy travel sector in the economy, with all the
jobs and tax revenue hotels, restaurants, airlines and car rental companies can
generate. Yes, California can have recessions and does, but it also boasts
lasting features that guarantee swift recovery from economic problems.
Then
there’s the big surprise in the lawnstarter.com rankings, supervised by faculty
at two major Eastern universities: California now ranks just 45th in
wildfire risk, and not because everything has already burned, but because
places like Idaho and Texas and Alabama are not as well prepared to handle
fires when they start.
It’s not
perfection, but it does put the lie to declinists who have said for many years
that California is headed downward in almost all regards. In fact, in most ways
the very opposite is true.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at
tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now
available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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