Imperial Valley Press

High living costs make people poor

- DAN WALTERS

There’s no question that the COVID-19 pandemic and the severe recession it spawned are widening California’s economic divide.

California already had the nation’s highest rate of functional poverty before this year began, as calculated by the Census Bureau using cost-of-living as well as income data, with nearly 20 percent of the state’s 40 million people impoverish­ed. The Public Policy Institute of California calculates that another fifth of California­ns are in “near-poverty.”

That was true even when California’s economy was booming, before COVID-19 and recession reared their ugly heads.

Low-income, non-white California­ns are more likely to be infected with the coronaviru­s, more likely to become unemployed, and more likely to become homeless as their incomes shrink. Therefore, it’s inescapabl­y logical that pandemic is making the poor even poorer.

However, the most important factor in California’s high, and apparently increasing, level of poverty is not income, but our very high cost-of-living, second only to Hawaii among the states. Everything — except, perhaps, seasonal produce — costs more than it does just about everywhere else.

Housing is the most significan­t costof-living component. Whether buying or renting, putting a roof over one’s head consumes a disproport­ionately high portion of personal income. And while housing costs have declined a bit during the current recession, in relative terms they remain very high.

Democratic politician­s who dominate the Capitol talk about jump-starting housing developmen­t, but have mostly dropped the ball.

Two big Democratic Party allies, labor unions and environmen­talists, are major impediment­s to housing reform.

Housing, however, is not the only cost factor that keeps so many California­ns in poverty. Energy for transporta­tion and to heat, cool and light our homes is another big one — obvious during summer heat waves when air conditioni­ng is not a luxury and even more so as California­ns comply with anti-pandemic, stay-at-home orders.

How high are California­ns’ energy costs? The Center for Jobs and the Economy, an affiliate of the California Business Roundtable, continuous­ly tracks them.

Its most recent report says that California motorists are paying the nation’s second highest gasoline prices, 98 cents a gallon or 47.3 percent higher than the average of the 49 other states.

The report also pegs residentia­l electric power rates at 55.8 percent higher than the average of other states, which translates into more than $6 billion per year in extra expense. Commercial power rates are 69.7 percent higher than those of other states, and industrial rates are 115 percent higher — costs that obviously translate into higher prices for consumers.

Monthly power bills will continue to rise sharply. For instance, as Pacific Gas and Electric emerges from bankruptcy, it faces massive new debts and new obligation­s to make its power grid safer, and both will inevitably affect consumers’ utility bills.

There’s another looming factor — efforts in some cities to ban natural gas hookups in favor of all-electric appliances, in the name of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

The problem with that seemingly well-meaning campaign is that relatively, electricit­y is already much more expensive than gas, so if it succeeds, higher household energy costs will further widen the economic gap.

A new report from a Washington-based think tank, The Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunit­y, contends that “banning the use of natural gas imposes a regressive energy tax on low- and middle-income consumers” in California. It notes that almost all of the cities banning gas have high personal incomes and are clustered in the San Francisco Bay Area.

California’s dominant liberals talk a lot about ending poverty, but are often oblivious that their policy decrees raise living costs of the poor.

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