California’s population is on the rise. So much for the claims of the state’s demise

California’s population is on the rise. So much for the claims of the state’s demise
Los Angeles, CA – March 24: Throngs of hikers in Dodger Blue make their the way to Mt. Hollywood in Griffith Park on Sunday, March 24, 2024 in Los Angeles, CA. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
(Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

California’s population is on the rise. So much for the claims of the state’s demise

California Politics ,Immigration and the Border,COVID-19 Pandemic

George Skelton April 15, 2024

It was bound to end. This is California, after all. Losing population defies our history. Now were back growing again.

Yes, thats correct. California has resumed adding people after three years of shedding them.

Just last week, I reported that California residents were fleeing the state. They still are. But our numbers again are rising, based on updated Newsom administration data to be released around May 1.

What caused the turnaround?

Fewer people are now able to work remotely in other states, old people have quit dying at the extraordinary rate they were during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Biden administration has relaxed restrictions on legal immigration.

These forces form the prime reasons for the return to positive population growth, state demographer Walter Schwarm told me in an email.

The new data will show that Californias population, as of Jan. 1, has again climbed above 39 million, Schwarm said.

A week ago, I cited a recent U.S. Census Bureau estimate that Californias population as of last July had fallen to 38,965,000. That was down by 75,400 in a year and 573,000 below Californias peak of 39.5 million in 2020.

In 2000, we were predicted to reach 45 million by 2020 and almost 60 million by 2040. And why not? Wed been growing topsy-turvy since the Gold Rush and were by far the most populous state in the nation.

But people have been moving to other states in recent years.

The main reason is Californias high living costs, especially for housing, researchers say. Homes are a lot cheaper almost anywhere

else

.

There are other reasons, too: High taxes. Homeless blight. Crime, especially at retail stores where customers worry about their safety.

Liberal politics also push out conservatives. They head to states like Idaho.

Some objected to Gov. Gavin Newsoms stay-at-home edict during the pandemic that closed classrooms, restaurants and shop an edict he himself infamously disobeyed by attending a lobbyist friends group birthday party at a ritzy wine country restaurant.

But one unique reason for departure to other states during the pandemic was that people found they could work there remotely for a California company and collect the same good salary while lowering their housing costs. That window is closing.

Businesses increasingly are requiring that their employees show up in person at least two or three times a week so-called hybrid work. Thats forcing people to stay in California and prompting more to move in.

With hybrid work arrangements becoming more common in late 2022 and throughout 2023, the number of individuals moving to California once again increased to historical levels, Schwarm emailed.

And he added: Those individuals moving to California are on average highly educated and earning commensurately higher levels of income.

Schwarm estimates that 26% of California employees were working at home in 2021. That percentage has been cut in half to slightly below 13% and is falling.

Newsom last week ordered state employees to work in the office at least twice a week starting in June.

The administration believes there are significant benefits to in-person work enhanced collaboration, cohesion, communication, better opportunities for mentorship, particularly for workers newer to the workforce, and improved supervision and accountability, Cabinet Secretary Ann Patterson wrote in a memo to all departments.

About half of state workers already are coming to the office because their jobs require it, Patterson said, but the other half are in various forms of hybrid or full-time remote work.

We are in a different place today as a society and as state agencies serving the public, she added in the memo.

Many private employers are ahead of Newsom on that thinking. Theyve been requiring at least hybrid work. And that has affected domestic migration.

More people still are moving out than moving in, but the gap is closing.

Last year, Schwarm says, roughly 91,000 more people left California than arrived from other states. But in 2022, the net loss was 170,000. And in the previous two pandemic years it was a total of 58

3

,000.

Also contributing to population loss, lots of older people died

of

COVID during the pandemic. And young people havent been producing babies like they used to.

Now, however, death rates are back to normal. Birth rates havent risen. But there still were 117,500 more births than deaths last year, Schwarm

said.

Former President Trump practically shut down foreign immigration legal and illegal during the pandemic. Visas were denied to reduce the virus spread and probably just because Trump didnt like a lot of the immigrants.

The New York Times quoted Trump telling financial backers at a recent political fundraiser: These are people coming from prisons and jails. Theyre coming in from just unbelievable places and countries, countries that are a disaster. Why cant we allow people to come in from nice countries like Denmark, Switzerland?

Schwarm said 42% of Californias legal immigrants come from Asia and 38% from Central America. And 57% have at least a bachelors degree. Last year, California gained more than 124,000 legal foreign immigrants,

There arent good numbers on undocumented immigrants, the demographer says, but U.S. Department of Homeland Security data indicate that most asylum-seekers wind up in other states.

Were growing for the first time in recent years, said H.D. Palmer, spokesman for the state Department of Finance that includes the demographic unit.

Its not at the go-go levels seen in past decades. But its a return to small levels of growth.

Hopefully itll stay small. Forty million people in 2040 has a much better ring than 60 million.

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