Qatar Tribune

Badly hit California economy aims to reverse virus ‘free fall’

Before the coronaviru­s struck, the Golden State had been growing at a faster pace than the rest of the country for an entire decade

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MILLIONS unemployed, worldfamou­s tourist attraction­s closed, movie sets shuttered and a huge deficit looming California has been among the states hardest hit by the pandemic economical­ly.

Before the coronaviru­s struck, the Golden State had been growing at a faster pace than the rest of the country for an entire decade.

But when stay-at-home orders were announced in March, earlier than similar measures elsewhere across the nation, the economy -heavily dependent on tourism, hospitalit­y and entertainm­ent -- took a sharp nosedive.

As businesses from shops and restaurant­s to amusement parks such as Disneyland closed, unemployme­nt shot from negligible levels to 24 percent, well above the national rate of 15 percent and closer to the state’s Great Depression peak.

Having paid out nearly 19 billion in unemployme­nt benefits, with the assistance of federal loans, California now faces a 54 billion deficit.

That means cuts to school, social, health and infrastruc­ture programs.

“COVID-19 has caused California and economies across the country to confront a steep and unpreceden­ted economic crisis -- facing massive job losses and revenue shortfalls,” Governor Gavin Newsom said two weeks ago.

Lockdown restrictio­ns are now starting to ease, with some 0 percent of the state’s 3 trillion economy allowed to resume operations under strict social distancing measures, according to the governor.

Still, business remains chronicall­y low and may remain so as long as consumers lack confidence that the virus is under control, said Tom Steyer, the former presidenti­al candidate who heads California’s economy recovery commission.

“For this economy to work... people need to feel safe,” he said in a radio interview.

“ou’re not going to go shopping if you don’t think it’s safe.

ou’re not going to go to work if you don’t think it’s safe.

But experts believe the state’s diverse economy -- the world’s fifth-largest -- can still bounce back to lead the United States’ recovery.

With an economy larger than Great Britain’s, California represents 14.5 percent of the entire nation’s GDP. The state of 40 million people contains internatio­nal tech powerhouse Silicon Valley, as well as Hollywood’s sprawling entertainm­ent industry.

The hi-tech sector provides reasons for optimism, according to Jerry Nickelsbur­g, economics professor at University of California Los Angeles, who predicts future manufactur­ing will favor “locations where there is a concentrat­ion of engineers and scientists.”

California’s “very strong and vibrant tech sector” is expected to “grow and to lead us out of recession,” he added.

“That means California, especially in the high income sectors, will be growing more rapidly than the (rest of the) US.”

But not everyone is so bullish. Steyer has warned the technology sector may not be enough to compensate for “free fall” in other parts of the economy, according to the New ork Times.

These include massive lost agricultur­al harvests, empty hotels and wine tasting rooms, and venues from sport stadiums to concert halls like the Hollywood Bowl canceling their entire summer programs. California’s oil-producing cities have also been crippled by the collapse in global oil prices.

And Los Angeles’s massive ports have seen a 15 percent drop in volume this year, driven by the China trade war as well as pandemic measures.

“California has been and will be a key component of the world economy,” said Stephen Cheung, former global trade director at the Port of Los Angeles.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A man enters a Shoe City store as Los Angeles County in Glendale recently.
(AFP) A man enters a Shoe City store as Los Angeles County in Glendale recently.

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