Illustration by Anne Wernikoff, CalMatters; iStock
요약해서
California has an opportunity to leverage surplus and stimulus funds to bridge income inequality. Our dashboard from the California Divide team tracks whether the state can turn the tide.
California is awash in cash — $100 billion says Gov. Gavin Newsom.
While much of the federal aid and taxes from the rich will be used to provide core services such as education and health care, the windfall also provides a once-in-a-generational opportunity to tackle one of California’s most vexing problems: income inequality.
Our dashboard is intended to be a gauge for California’s response. As the governor and Legislature debate spending priorities, our team is interested in monitoring the effects on the ground: How is the state using its surplus to improve lives? Are low-income workers making gains relative to those at the top? Can tenants afford rent in the region they live? Is child poverty going down? Through these questions, we hope to monitor whether the state is on track for a more equitable economic recovery.
Jump down to...
Who's able to find work?
Low-wage workers were most likely to lose their jobs during the pandemic.
While middle- and high-wage workers have begun to recover employment, low-wage workers have not. This chart shows employment change since January 2020.
And what's the pay gap?
The average California worker makes $65,740 a year but there’s a big pay gap between restaurant servers and CEOs.
This chart shows wages by occupation.
How much does a house cost?
Real estate prices have soared across the state during the pandemic.
It’s not just a shortage of homes, but bad housing policy decisions stemming from local resistance 그리고 mismanagement have also contributed to the crisis. The median price of a house in the Bay Area tops $1.3 million.
These renters have been temporarily helped by a moratorium on evictions, but the ban is set to lift June 30. This chart shows how many hours a worker at local minimum wage would need to pay for a one-bedroom apartment.
What's the poverty rate?
Federal stimulus includes a child tax credit that is being likened to a universal basic income for California families.
On paper, the credit has the potential to lift half of California children out of poverty, which could be especially beneficial for Latino and Black children. Can the state with the highest poverty rate in the nation turn the tide?
But state and local governments will benefit by the billions to help close deficits, boost education spending and increase public assistance programs.
Click each rectangle to see more detail.
How much are we spending on the state's budget?
In the case of the state, Newsom and lawmakers also have a surplus to spend.
In his latest budget proposal, the Democratic governor charted a course to expand preschool, summer school and after-school programs. He also wants to expand the Golden State Stimulus to the middle class, among a long list of ideas.
Hover over each rectangle to see more detail.
CalMatters staff Judy Lin, John Osborn D'Agostino, Jackie Botts and Nigel Duara contributed to this story.
이 기사는 다음의 일부입니다. 캘리포니아 디바이드캘리포니아의 소득 불평등과 경제적 생존을 조사하는 뉴스룸 간 협업.
About the Data
The data used in this dashboard are pulled from the sources listed below each graphic. A few extra notes:
The data in the rent table are the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's Fair Market Rents (FMRs), which represent the cost to rent a moderately-priced dwelling unit in a local housing market. Work hours needed per week are calculated using local minimum wage and the affordability metric of rent not exceeding 30% of household income. Minimum wages used to calculate: San Francisco ($16.07), Los Angeles ($14.25), Chico and Fresno (state $13.00).
For the analysis of food sufficiency data from the Census Bureau's Pulse Survey, we included respondents that reported food in their household was "often not enough to eat" and "sometimes not enough to eat" in the last 7 days. The percentage is calculated out of those who responded to the question. Because of the potential volatility of percentages, especially for subgroups such as race/ethnicity, we pooled 2 observations of data into one percentage per group per month to reduce the margin of error.
Erica Yee is a data reporter who collaborates frequently with the health, education, inequality and environment teams. She joined CalMatters as an intern in 2020 and then stuck around as part of the growing... More by Erica Yee
Republish
Measuring California’s progress on income inequality
독자들과 저희의 이야기를 공유하고 싶어하시는 것을 정말 좋아합니다. 수백 개의 출판사가 저희 작품을 정기적으로 재출판합니다.
CalMatters의 모든 기사는 다음 조건 하에 무료로 재출판할 수 있습니다.
Give prominent credit to our journalists: Credit our authors at the top of the article and any other byline areas of your publication. In the byline, we prefer “By Author Name, CalMatters.” If you’re republishing guest commentary (example) from CalMatters, in the byline, use “By Author Name, Special for CalMatters.”
Credit CalMatters at the top of the story: At the top of the story’s text, include this copy: “This story was originally published by 칼매터스. 가입하기 for their newsletters.” If you are republishing 해설, include this copy instead: “This commentary was originally published by 칼매터스. 가입하기 for their newsletters.” If you’re republishing in print, omit the second sentence on newsletter signups.
Do not edit the article, including the headline,단, 시간, 장소 및 편집 스타일의 상대적인 변화를 반영하는 경우는 예외입니다. 예를 들어, "어제"를 "지난주"로 변경할 수 있으며 "Alameda County"를 "Alameda County, California" 또는 "여기"로 변경할 수 있습니다.
기사의 현지화에 도움이 되는 보고서를 추가하면, 귀하의 스토리에 이 사본을 포함하세요: "[귀하의 출판물]의 추가 보도" 그리고 저희에게 알려주세요. republish@calmatters.org.
다른 질문이나 특별한 요청이 있으신가요? 아니면 저희 스토리 중 하나가 청중에게 미친 영향에 대한 좋은 스토리가 있으신가요? 여러분의 의견을 듣고 싶습니다. 다음 주소로 문의하세요. republish@calmatters.org.
Gift this article
Measuring California’s progress on income inequality - CalMatters
California has an opportunity to leverage surplus and stimulus funds to bridge income inequality. Can the state turn the tide?
칼매터스
캘리포니아에 대한 설명
에리카 예
Erica Yee는 건강, 교육, 불평등 및 환경 팀과 자주 협업하는 데이터 리포터입니다. 그녀는 2020년 CalMatters에 인턴으로 입사한 후 성장하는 Data and Interactives 팀의 일원으로 남았습니다. 때때로 그녀의 하루는 스프레드시트를 꼼꼼히 들여다보는 것처럼 보입니다. 다른 때는 캘리포니아인들이 집과 이웃을 더 잘 이해하도록 돕는 매력적인 그래픽과 도구를 디자인하고 코딩하는 것으로 구성됩니다. 그녀는 가뭄 및 물 추적기, 임금 절도 시리즈 및 COVID-19 불평등에 대한 고등학생 경험에 대한 멀티미디어 프로젝트로 상을 수상한 CalMatters 팀의 일원이었습니다. Erica는 Northeastern University에서 저널리즘 및 정보 과학 학위를 취득했습니다. 학생 시절 그녀는 San Francisco Chronicle, CNBC 및 Boston.com에서 인턴으로 일했습니다. 그녀는 오클랜드에 거주하고 있습니다.