Published
4 years agoon
Thirty-four years ago, two researchers delved into California’s rapidly changing demographic and economic trends and saw “an emerging two-tier economy with Asians and better-educated non-Hispanic whites and blacks competing for the prestigious occupations while poorly educated Hispanics and blacks scramble for the lower status jobs …”
At 23.4%, PPIC says, Latino poverty is nearly twice the 12.5% among white Californians. The Latino rate is virtually identical to that of the state’s most poverty-stricken county, Los Angeles (23 percent), which shouldn’t be a surprise since Los Angeles has a huge Latino population that suffers from low education and income levels but must cope with very high living costs, especially for housing.
The National Low Income Housing Coalition recently calculated that California has the nation’s second-highest gap between income and housing costs. On average, it says, a family income of $72,165 a year ($34.69 per hour) is needed to afford the average rent of $1,804 a month for a two-bedroom apartment, but the average renter earns just $22.79 an hour.
The San Francisco Bay Area has the state’s highest housing costs, but because its incomes are relatively high, its poverty, as calculated by PPIC, mirrors the statewide rate of 18.5%.
Two overwhelmingly white suburban counties east of Sacramento, El Dorado and Placer counties, have the lowest poverty rates, 10% and 12.5% respectively.
When PPIC’s data are broken down further by local communities, poverty ranges from a low of 5.1% to a high of 44.5%.
Education is an especially noticeable marker in California’s two-tier society. PPIC found that just 7.8% of adults aged 25-64 with college degrees are poverty-stricken but it jumps to 31.8% for those without high school diplomas.
Speaking of which, Wallethub, a website devoted to economic data, recently calculated education levels in the 150 largest “metropolitan statistical areas” (MSA) and California’s divide was starkly evident.
One of California’s MSAs, Silicon Valley (Santa Clara County), ranked No. 2 in education levels behind Ann Arbor, MI, while another, San Francisco-Oakland, was No. 6.
However, the Visalia-Porterville MSA in Tulare County was lowest at No. 150 and five other California MSAs were in the bottom 10: Fresno, Stockton-Lodi, Salinas, Modesto, and Bakersfield. All are in California’s farm belt and have very large Latino populations.
The Los Angeles-Orange County MSA was No. 92 in education, which explains, in part, why it suffers from poverty much more than the San Francisco Bay Area.
Those are the numbers, and they confirm not only that California is a two-tier society, but that narrowing the gap would require Herculean efforts to moderate housing costs and improve the educations of children from poor families, particularly Latinos.
Neither appears to be happening and the gap is growing wider.
CALmatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary
Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He has written more than 9,000 columns about the state and its politics and is the founding editor of the “California Political Almanac.” Dan has also been a frequent guest on national television news shows, commenting on California issues and policies.
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