|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Inequality
California: a case study in inequality
By Don Knowland
7 March 2000
Use
this version to print
A series of recent reports have highlighted the growing inequalities
in wealth and income in the midst of an economic "boom"
in California. The release of these studies prompted the Los
Angeles Times to say that California had entered a new "Gilded
Age," where "the income gap between the rich and poor
is wider than at almost any time in history and magnified by sudden
wealth and lavish living of a growing elite."
But it is not just the officially poor who are being left far
behind. Even middle-income families, those earning near the median
income level of $44,000 per year, are straining to make ends meet.
Poor and middle income families haven't languished this far behind
in California since the Roaring 20s, on the eve of the Great Depression.
These studies show that the disparity between rich and poor
is widening faster than in any other state in the US. Third world
poverty exists virtually side by side with an opulence imaginable
by only the very few. For example, Silicon Valley billionaire
Larry Ellison, who founded the software company Oracle, lives
on a 22-acre medieval Japanese-style retreat, which houses a fleet
of exotic cars and planes. Just a few miles down the road high-tech
assembly workers cram into ever smaller living quarters because
of ballooning rents.
A report by the California Policy Institute documents this
increasing concentration of wealth at the top of the income ladder.
From 1993 to 1997, the annual income of the top 1 percent in California
grew by 57 percent to $845,000. That of the middle quintile grew
only 1.8 percent to $24,177. While the income of the poorest 20
percent of families increased 10 percent during that time period,
that still represented a 13 percent drop from 1989 and a whopping
22 percent less in real dollars than in 1969. With prices rising
for many necessities such as housing, even these increases do
not represent any real increase in living standards.
A United Way study concludes that the middle class is shrinkingover
half of households in California have a net worth less than $25,000.
Yet California, with under 10 percent of the national population,
has well over 10 percent of the 3.5 million US households that
had over a $1 million net worth in 1998. In Silicon Valley, competition
to reach a billion dollars in net worth is the avowed aim of the
high-tech moguls who make the Valley's investment and production
decisions. But the high-tech "boom" has not generated
high-tech factory jobs paying anything like the level of wages
once seen in the old low-tech industries.
A report issued by the California Budget Project concludes
that a two-parent family of four needs at least $44,880 a year
just to make ends meet. In the San Francisco Bay area, the state's
most expensive place to live, the figure is $53,736. The figures
do not allow for saving for retirement or children's college education.
They do not include expenses many people must incur to function,
such as auto insurance, which is legally required in California
to operate a car, and which may cost anywhere from $80 to $200
a month, depending on residential area. The figures are also based
on renting rather than buying a home, and home prices are back
to their pre-recession 1990-91 peak. Home ownership is out of
reach for a majority of families.
Families in the $20-40,000 income range in California are not
making ends meet, they are going without. A $24,000 income leaves
no room to purchase basics such as health insurance or new clothing.
The California Budget Project's report concludes that "the
poverty threshold [defined by the US government as $16,700 for
a family of four] is an obsolete measure that fails to take into
account the reality of modern [California] families."
Yet the Oakland-based group Children Now reports that one in
four children in the state overall are faring even worseofficially
living in poverty. One in three children are poor in 13 of 58
counties in California. Twenty-seven percent of Latino families
live below the poverty line; 24 percent of black families.
Poverty is endemic, if not increasing, in the southern San
Joaquin Valley, the heartland of California's huge agricultural
industry. Many agricultural workers continue to live the equivalent
of an old-South sharecropper existence in tarpaper shacks, plywood
shanties and wooden boxcars with no running water. But the poverty
is not just in the fieldsmany families have moved into the
burgeoning Valley cities such as Bakersfield and Fresno to avoid
the high prices and deteriorating social services of the Los Angeles
and San Francisco Bay areas. Fresno is now the sixth poorest school
district in the nation, barely trailing East St. Louis and Detroit.
Fully 40 percent of the state's poverty is located in Los Angeles
County. The greater Los Angeles region is the fourteenth biggest
economy in world. The recession of the early 90s hit the region
late, but very hard. The remaining steel mills, tire and automobile
plants that had produced thousands of union jobs in south central
and southeast Los Angeles in the 1950s through 1970s closed. Aerospace
and defense industries faced huge cutbacks.
The economy began its "recovery" in the mid-1990s.
Employment in the entertainment industry grew by 50,000 jobs before
leveling off in 1998. It, along with low-wage light manufacturers
such as furniture and toys, apparel, trade and oil refining, became
the area's base industries. With the recovery also came burgeoning
demand among the top 20 percent of the population for maids, nannies,
cooks and gardeners.
In the last year the high-tech speculative mania has hit the
Los Angeles area, which venture capitalists and Internet incubator
outfits have newly dubbed the "tech coast." This is
centered on the so-called merging of the entertainment content
produced by the entertainment industry personnel with the Internet,
a phenomenon reflected in the proposed AOL/Time-Warner merger.
But while huge sums of money are tossed about in virtual ventures,
the official Los Angeles County unemployment rate remains at 5.8
percent, double that of San Francisco. Moreover, as the festering
official poverty rates in the Los Angeles area demonstrate, most
of the jobs generated have been at minimum wage (which generates
an annual income just under $12,000), or slightly above minimum.
Last week a homeless agency reported a larger increase in the
number of families living on the streets. Those who lose a job
or face a financial setback fall through the frayed safety net
of welfare and other social service cutbacks. A clothing relief
agency reported earlier this month that upward of 60 percent of
students come to school every day in the Los Angeles City School
District with inadequate clothing.
Although wages have stagnated, rents have increased. By 1998
the county average for a two-bedroom apartment reached $762, or
64 percent of the monthly minimum wage. Upward pressures on rents
increased particularly during 1999 and continue unabated.
In many Los Angeles working class and immigrant areas overcrowding
has become a critical problem. For example, according to the State
Department of Finance, the southeast Los Angeles cities of Maywood,
Cudahy, Huntington Park and Bell Gardens (areas, along with Compton
and south central Los Angeles, with the lowest rents) have densities
of 20-25,000 people per square mile. These are the highest population
densities in the United States outside of Manhattan, Brooklyn,
the Bronx and a few other areas in metropolitan New York and New
Jersey. Over the last decade population is up 10 percent in these
areas, but the housing stock is down. Single family homes greatly
outnumber apartment buildings. Two or three families often share
a single living space. Illegal subdivisions and garage conversions
are common.
In the midst of this crowding, children find it difficult to
study. Domestic violence and other psychological stresses increase
markedly. The population pressures put additional strains on already
deteriorating public services, such as schools, parks and libraries
in municipal areas already bereft of funds. These conditions are
typical of many other poor and working class areas throughout
Los Angeles County.
Poorer areas are particularly subject to deficient health care.
According to the Health Atlas of Southern California, recently
released by the Southern California Study Center at the University
of Southern California, more than 25 percent of families in southern
California as a whole lack health insurance; 50 percent of naturalized
citizens and 56 percent of noncitizens don't have it. In Los Angeles
County alone 2.7 million people are uninsured , 700,000 of them
children. Those with coverage must typically contend with the
limited choices and treatments available through managed care.
Those without coverage typically face more frequent and severe
health problems. According to the Health Atlas, uninsured persons
are three times more likely not to seek treatment for diabetes
or hypertension. Those seeking treatment face physical and other
access problems, including to emergency centers or public clinics,
both of which have faced county funding cutbacks. In the private
arena, during the 1990s the number of emergency hospitals in the
Los Angeles area dropped by 20 percent, and the number of trauma
centers by 60 percent.
Many families also lack provisions for child care. The California
Child Care Resource & Referral Network, an association of
agencies in all 58 counties that provide referrals for child care,
reports that child care is in extremely short supply, especially
for the crucial infant and toddler years. There are six children
of working parents for every licensed child care spot available
in Los Angeles County; statewide, five children for every slot.
A parent who earns the state's median income ($39,000) must spend
a fifth of it on child care. Minimum wage earners spend more than
half the minimum wage to pay for child care; "low-income"
families earning under $30,000 per year, 22 percent.
It is only eight years since riots engulfed large portions
of the poorer areas of Los Angeles County in the wake of the acquittal
of the Los Angeles police officers that beat Rodney King. As the
recent articles on social inequality by the Los Angeles Times
show, there is increasing concern in corporate and political circles
that the terrible conditions that produced the 1992 explosion
have only worsened. For example, labor economist Stanford Jacoby
of the University of California at Los Angeles stresses the risks
of increasing social instability. Lynn Karoly, the senior economist
at Rand Corp., a Santa Monica think tank, has warned that these
inequalities will grow even wider in a downturn, threatening "social
unrest."
Skyrocketing rents and the unequal distribution of wealth became
the key issues in the recent San Francisco mayoral election. A
write-in candidate forced long-time Democratic Party kingpin Willie
Brown into a runoff election. In his inauguration speech last
month Brown was compelled to make hollow promises about providing
"affordable housing and a livable wage."
On the eve of the new millennium this is the state of affairs
in California, the most populated state in the richest country
on earth. Contrary to widespread claims of unbounded prosperity,
growth and opportunity, California fully embodies the worldwide
and worsening inequalities and the deterioration of living standards
for masses of people that are the hallmark of global capitalism.
See Also:
New report documents growing
social inequality in the US
[19 January 2000]
California
students protest funding of prisons instead of universities
[3 October 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |