Inflation threatens California’s economic recovery

Last week I bought a container of Diet Peach Snapple at Stater Brothers for $2.49.  On Sunday I bought another container—for $2.79—that is a 10% increase in one week.  We have seen the price of going across the Golden Gate Bridge rise from $7 to $9—a $28 raise.  On March 1 PG&E instituted a 9% raise—now they are requesting another 22% raise.  On July 1, automatically the tax on gas in California goes up.  At the same time the Governor closing down well paying jobs in agriculture, oil and tech industries.  As leases end, firms are closing down or moving out of State.  San Fran is a ghost town.  L.A. is rivaling Chicago for the nations crime capitol—and is several hundred cops short—making sure criminals are safe because of either the DA refusing to bring charges, no cash bail or the cops under siege from radical and political hacks.“Bernick: “Inflation has already cut into wage gains in California, particularly the wage gains of lower income workers, and threatens to significantly slow growth.”

Soaring inflation, plus Russia’s war on Ukraine, have contributed to eye-popping gas prices: The average price in California for a regular gallon was $5.74 on Sunday, compared to $5.29 a week ago, according to the American Automobile Association.

Want to stop inflation?  Defeat Newsom and Biden—under Trump for four years we did not have inflation.  Short of that get your wheel barrel ready to take your money to the grocery store.

Inflation threatens California’s economic recovery

BY EMILY HOEVEN, CalMatters,   3/14/22 

IN SUMMARY

California’s economic recovery was better than expected, but gas prices are shooting up, threatening the state’s hard-fought gains.

California’s economic recovery from the devastations of the pandemic was stronger than previously estimated — but skyrocketing inflation could rob the state of its hard-earned gains.

Those were the main takeaways from a Friday report from the state Employment Development Department, which pinpointed California’s January unemployment rate at 5.8% — the same as its December rate, which was revised down from 6.5% due to updated figures showing sizable job gains that month. Other key takeaways:

  • California saw a 7.4% increase in job gains from January 2021 to January 2022, compared to 4.6% nationally.
  • The state has regained approximately 82% of the nearly 2.8 million jobs lost in the first two months of the pandemic — more than previously projected.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, who lauded California’s economic prowess in last week’s State of the State speech, said the report was evidence that the state’s COVID-19 restrictions worked.

  • Newsom“Our approach has been to follow the science while supporting those hardest hit by the pandemic, and it not only saved tens of thousands of lives — it got our state back to work faster and better than the rest of the country.”

But there’s still a long way to go: California tied with Nevada for the nation’s highest unemployment rate in December, the last month for which federal statistics are available. The Golden State’s civilian labor force is still down by 452,000 workers compared to pre-pandemic levels, according to Michael Bernick, a former EDD director and attorney at Duane Morris. And inflation rose 7.9% nationwide in the yearlong period that ended in February, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported last week — the highest rate in 40 years.

  • Bernick: “Inflation has already cut into wage gains in California, particularly the wage gains of lower income workers, and threatens to significantly slow growth.”
  • Soaring inflation, plus Russia’s war on Ukraine, have contributed to eye-popping gas prices: The average price in California for a regular gallon was $5.74 on Sunday, compared to $5.29 a week ago, according to the American Automobile Association.

Today, Republican state lawmakers are expected to force a vote on a bill to eliminate California’s 51-cent gas excise tax for six months — one of several ideas Newsom and legislators have proposed to help people hurting at the pump. (Another bill, introduced Friday by Democratic state Sen. Ben Allen of Santa Monica, would require oil refiners to disclose their profit margins on each barrel of gasoline sold.)

  • But tinkering with the gas tax appears to be increasingly politically unappealing for California’s supermajority-Democratic Legislature. “We need to just leave the gas tax alone and focus on other forms of tax rebates or other supports for working families,” state Sen. Scott Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat, told the Los Angeles Times.
  • Still, some question whether rebates — potentially similar to the Golden State stimulus checks sent last year to millions of Californians — could worsen runaway inflation. “We have an overheated economy,” Republican political consultant Rob Stutzman told the Sacramento Bee. “Does it really make sense to dump money back in?”