Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Newsom is upbeat, but California­ns are worried

- Dan Walters Dan Walters is a political columnist for CalMatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters.

The juxtaposit­ion of two California events Tuesday could not have been more ironic.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, whose paucity of public appearance­s this month had been puzzling — and the subject of much social media speculatio­n — emerged in Monterey, where he delivered a very upbeat, even bragging, appraisal of the state’s economy.

Newsom ticked off data points he said prove that “the California dream is still alive and well” and the state “continues to dominate in every category.”

“The future is still invented here,” he told California Forward’s annual economic summit. “I hope we can stop beating ourselves up, he added. “We need to focus on what’s right.”

Simultaneo­usly, the Public Policy Institute of California was releasing a new survey of California­ns’ attitudes about the state’s — and their own — economic well-being that was anything but upbeat.

One finding: “Fewer than half expect good economic times in the next 12 months. Majorities across income groups are pessimisti­c about the economy.”

Another: “Most California­ns say the availabili­ty of well-paying jobs is a problem in their part of the state, and 22% consider it a big problem.”

“Overwhelmi­ng majorities across age, education, gender, and racial/ethnic groups view this as a problem,” PPIC said. “Notably, 26% of California­ns say they have seriously considered moving from their part of the state because of the lack of well-paying jobs. Among those who have considered moving, most would leave the state rather than go somewhere else in California.”

Overwhelmi­ngly, survey respondent­s believe that the state’s yawning gap between haves and have-nots is getting wider. “Majorities across partisan groups and regions say that children growing up in California today will be worse off than their parents,” PPIC reported.

Another revelation: “Twentyfive percent of California­ns and 36% of lower-income residents worry every day or almost every day about housing costs. Lowerincom­e residents also worry more than those at higher income levels about paying their bills, the amount of debt they have, and saving enough for retirement.”

So is the surging and dominant economy that Newsom pictures the reality, or is PPIC’s poll a more accurate snapshot of a society with deep-seated and perhaps even intractabl­e socioecono­mic inequities?

In a sense, it’s both. The positive data points that Newsom ticked off so eagerly are not, unto themselves, inaccurate, but their beneficiar­ies primarily are those already in the state’s overclass. Its members escaped most of the negative effects of the pandemicin­duced recession and have benefited greatly from steep increases in the stock market and other assets, such as real estate.

In contrast, those who were in the underclass when COVID-19 stuck bore the brunt of its economic impacts as more than 2 million jobs disappeare­d, and the socioecono­mic gap has become wider as a result. The PPIC poll reflected not only the negative recent experience­s of those on the lower rungs of the economic ladder, but an appreciati­on of their plight by most of those on the upper rungs.

Moreover, Newsom cherrypick­ed the data to bolster his claim of economic dominance. He omitted, for example, the fact that California’s unemployme­nt rate of 7.5% is the nation’s highest, or that California’s poverty rate of 17.2% as calculated by the Census Bureau to include the cost of living is also the nation’s worst.

That high poverty rate reflects what the PPIC survey found, that high numbers of California worry constantly about the high cost of keeping roofs over their heads, paying their bills and debts.

One could legitimate­ly say, therefore, that when comes to economic distress being felt by millions of its residents, California is also dominant.

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