TL;DR:
People aren't real.
I would say, it HAS TO BE rich because:
1. It's superior location - direct access to world trade from ports. Big advantage over landlocked states.
This does not guarantee success, but of course there has been an observed difference in economic outcomes for landlocked vs. coastal economies. However, Texas and Florida are also coastal states. California is simply one of many states with ports.
2. Superior climate. Mild climate is better than continental. Less extreme temperature swings.
Spain, Italy, Portugal, and Greece are in the same climate zone (Mediterranean).
3. Historic reasons. Because tech sector developed mostly there in the seventies.
Why did it develop in California? California has been able to attract and cultivate a highly-product workforce. There's a reason for this, and at least some of it goes to strategic government and private investments (especially the wildly underappreciated American research university system).
California's economy, furthermore, is highly diversified.
1. Do you think the current high bureaucracy and strict regulation is a good thing or bad thing? A driver of progress or an obstacle?
You will have to be more specific. I see some California laws as beneficial, for example:
1) Drivers of investment in infrastructure and ease of transportation
2) Employment laws that serve as bulwarks against the gig economy's push toward replacing employees with independent contractors
3) Investment in post-secondary research education (the University of California + CSU + Cal Poly + CCC system is unparalleled domestically)
I see others as harmful, especially housing and development restrictions. Just changing housing regulations in NYC and the Bay Area could lead to a double-digit long-term improvement in
nationwide GDP (see:
https://www.econlib.org/a-correction-on-housing-regulation/).
In general, many California development priorities make this an area with desirable quality-of-life. The little things- parks, walkability, bike lanes, reliable public transport, sensible government protections (e.g., extended COBRA coverage, restrictions on security deposit deductions, limitations on the fees car dealerships can charge)- make this place well worth it for me. This does not mean that others will enjoy living here, especially if they cannot afford to.
Keep in mind that California is bureaucratic and strict
by American standards. Compared to Canada and most of civilized Europe, this is still the Wild West with tiny tax burdens.
2. Is it currently managed well or mismanaged?
This depends on the standard. California is not
optimally managed. There are ways in which I strongly disagree with the state government (see: policies around awarding of contracts, which have been prone to abuse and led to delays and cost overruns in infrastructure projects).
I would not trade California's state government, however, for the state government of any other US state- especially not that of Texas.
3. Why people are leaving California? This is not a good thing.
Because they can't afford to live here. CA had a net migration loss of about 1 million people over a decade, during which the state population still grew by 2-3 million.
Not every place needs to be affordable for everyone. While California certainly
should roll back its asinine drivers of high housing prices (which is hard to do when many of your voters
own million-dollar cottages and don't want to lose out on those investments), there are- past a certain point- trade-offs when you try to make a place livable for those who cannot compete economically.
As the saying goes: if you are poor in Europe, you will be
really poor in America. If you are rich in Europe, you will be
really rich in America. While part of this has to do with American inefficiencies, other parts of this come from Europe lowering the ceiling to raise the floor.
Personally, if you create a place like the SF Bay Area that attracts a flood of people to whom US$100k is no big deal, you are bound to price out people.
leaders addressed and solved many issues it would be EVEN RICHER, and attract more people and talent.
My opinion is that the leader-focused model of politics is wildly counterproductive and responsible for present inefficiencies.
In a democratic society, politicians are simply those who can get elected and keep getting elected. They must either respond to incentives- do what it takes to win the next election- or find themselves replaced by someone who will.
So I see nothing special about Gavin Newsom, Nancy Pelosi, Chesa Boudin, or any of these other elected leaders. At least I don't think they matter
as people. They're just humans fulfilling jobs responding to the incentive models of those jobs.
California has its housing policies not because Gavin Newsom is malicious or stupid or incompetent but because that's how the incentives shake out. We have housing restrictions because entrenched interests- people with votes and money- create incentives that make it politically costly/impossible to make it easier to improve the housing supply in California.
Ultimately, however, the power resides in votes. Money has influence in politics because it affects votes. Redistricting, restrictions, etc., also ultimately manifest impact through votes. The media has power because it, too, affects votes.
Voters are in a position where we can change these incentives for politicians and achieve policies we desire. But we don't, because we're not real either. We create a lot of bad incentives, and just as you've provided a counterfactual where "better" leadership would lead to better results, the same applies to voters: low voter appetite for and high opposition to certain policies (e.g., the opposition to free trade, the fear of open borders-
https://openborders.info/double-world-gdp/) are similarly responsible for our world not being considerably better.
We also respond to social incentives that drive our own beliefs- you're more likely to challenge your own beliefs when you have people around you that you like or want to be like who disagree with those beliefs, and more likely to continue believing what you believe (without even being conscious of your assumptions) when your social neighborhood shares those assumptions. This is why, although we
experience logic, we don't really live it. People experience
reasoning through their views on poverty and taxes, for example, but in spite of this you can predict those views based on demographic profiles.
It's just a system. Until we put in the effort to understand how it works and why it behaves as it does and where to tweak the incentives, we can't really change it. Only fruitlessly blame people, vote them out, vote new ones in, etc., because we forget that people aren't even real. We swapped out Trump for Biden and thought it solved the problem when r*rals still exist out there, subsidized and un-eradicated.
Edited 9/10/2021 23:56:48