Lodi News-Sentinel

Study finds little change in desire to exit Golden State

- Don Sweeney

A new University of California, San Diego, study shows that the number of California­ns desiring to flee the Golden State has remained steady despite the pandemic.

A survey of 2,768 California voters found 23% are seriously considerin­g moving out of state, compared to 24% in a 2019 survey by the University of California, Berkeley, the study says.

“Despite the popular notion of unhappy California­ns leaving the state en masse, our robust research shows there is actually no exodus,” lead researcher Thad Kousser said in a statement.

The study found only a small gap between Democrats’ and Republican­s’ responses, with 21% of Democrats considerin­g a move, compared to 30% of Republican­s.

By a 2-1 margin, respondent­s said they still believe in the “California dream,” that the state is a great place to raise a family, the study found.

Latinos, African Americans, Asian Americans and younger California­ns tended to be more optimistic of the state, the study said. White, middleclas­s, older and Republican residents tended to be more pessimisti­c.

The number of California­ns who said they believe they live in the best state in the United States fell 8% — from 50% in the 2019 UC Berkeley poll — however.

Contrary to claims that millionair­es are eager to flee California, the UC San Diego study found affluent California­ns are among the most satisfied with the state’s direction.

A broader UC-led study also found that California draws more than half of the venture capital investment­s in the U.S., rising from the third it drew in 1995.

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