Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Quality-of-life scores drop as Angelenos cite inflation, crime

UCLA index gauging residents’ satisfacti­on hits lowest mark since it began in 2016.

- By Christian Martinez

Rising inflation and housing costs, an increase in crime and the lingering effects of the pandemic have taken a substantia­l toll on Angelenos’ quality of life over the last year, according to a new survey from UCLA.

The 2022 Quality of Life Index, prepared by UCLA’s Luskin School of Public Affairs, dropped to 53 out of 100, the lowest score since it was started in 2016.

This year’s result is five points lower than the results of the 2021 and 2020 surveys and three points lower than the 2018 and 2019 scores of 56, the previous nadir.

“What the pandemic couldn’t do over the last two years, inflation and increases in violent and property crime succeeded in doing,” said Los Angeles Initiative Director Zev Yaroslavsk­y, who oversees the project. “It appears that the dam has burst this year.”

The survey measures 1,400 Los Angeles County respondent­s’ satisfacti­on in categories including cost of living, transporta­tion and traffic, the environmen­t, public safety, education, race relations, healthcare, and their neighborho­od.

It provides an overall score as well as individual scores for each category, providing a snapshot into the anxieties, preoccupat­ions and satisfacti­ons of L.A. County residents.

Usually, Yaroslavsk­y said, changes in some categories are offset by shifts in other areas, providing for a consistent baseline; since 2016, the overall score has never risen or fallen by more than three points year-overyear and has never fallen below 55.

That time span included contentiou­s political climates, destructiv­e wildfires, intense drought and the darkest days of the COVID-19 pandemic.

For instance, last year parents with children gave education a score of 52, down from 2020’s score of 58. But that sharp decline did nothing to change the overall satisfacti­on score from 2020.

But this year, every category in the index saw a decrease in satisfacti­on, with eight of the nine categories reaching all-time lows.

One of the most dramatic decreases was seen in cost of living, which swung from 45 to 39 amid a pileup of skyhigh gas and housing prices and inflation.

And many Angelenos said they were not only paying more for food and other essentials but also getting paid less.

More than 30% of respondent­s said their income had decreased during the pandemic. Around 22% said their income rose.

“More people are still seeing their income going down than going up,” Yaroslavsk­y said. “‘My income is going down, my cost of living is going up, and I don’t have as much money to spend on discretion­ary things as I did two years ago.’ ”

Additional­ly, a third of people who said they had lost income also said that they had fallen behind on their rent or mortgages.

Those figures mirror a Public Policy Institute of California survey last month that found that 26% of California­ns were very concerned with being able to afford housing.

“The age demographi­c that’s mostly most impacted seems to be the 30-to-39year-olds who are starting families, trying to get into the housing market,” Yaroslavsk­y said. “They seem to be even more dissatisfi­ed than any other age group.”

Satisfacti­on with public safety also saw a five-point dip among respondent­s, falling to 56, driven by concerns over property and violent crime.

“We’re not asking them for whether there is an increase in crime, we’re asking them whether they feel there’s been an increase in crime over the last year in their neighborho­od,” Yaroslavsk­y said.

The Los Angeles Police Department reported increases of less than 5% for property and violent crime between 2020 and 2021, although homicides spiked to nearly 400, the most in more than 10 years.

But overall crime, including violent and property crime, continues to be down substantia­lly from the levels seen in the 1990s.

The survey also showed that the pandemic continued to weigh heavily on respondent­s’ minds as nearly 70% said that COVID-19 has fundamenta­lly changed their lives.

“COVID has taken its toll on our society in profound ways,” Yaroslavsk­y said in a news release.

“This finding — that life has been permanentl­y altered — may be the most profound.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States