California’s New Feudalism Benefits a Few at the Expense of the Multitude. By Joel Kotkin.
California’s New Feudalism Benefits a Few at the Expense of the Multitude. By Joel Kotkin. JoelKotkin.com, October 5, 2013. Also at The Daily Beast, New Geography.
Kotkin:
California
has been the source of much innovation, from agribusiness and oil to fashion
and the digital world. Historically much richer than the rest of the country,
it was also the birthplace, along with Levittown, of the mass-produced suburb,
freeways, much of our modern entrepreneurial culture, and of course mass
entertainment. For most of a century, for both better and worse, California has
defined progress, not only for America but for the world.
As late
as the 80s, California was democratic in a fundamental sense, a place for
outsiders and, increasingly, immigrants—roughly 60 percent of the population
was considered middle class. Now, instead of a land of opportunity, California
has become increasingly feudal. According to recent census estimates, the state suffers some of the highest levels
of inequality in the country. By some estimates, the state’s level of
inequality compares with that of such global models as the Dominican Republic, Gambia, and the
Republic of the Congo.
At the
same time, the Golden State now suffers the highest level of poverty in the
country—23.5 percent compared to 16 percent nationally—worse than long-term
hard luck cases like Mississippi. It is also now home to roughly one-third of
the nation’s welfare recipients, almost three times its proportion of the
nation’s population.
Like
medieval serfs, increasing numbers of Californians are downwardly mobile, and
doing worse than their parents: native born Latinos actually have shorter
lifespans than their parents, according to one recent report. Nor are things
expected to get better any time soon. According to a recent Hoover Institution
survey, most Californians expect their incomes to stagnate in the coming six
months, a sense widely shared among the young, whites, Latinos, females, and
the less educated.
Some of
these trends can be found nationwide, but they have become pronounced and are
metastasizing more quickly in the Golden State. As late as the 80s, the state
was about as egalitarian as the rest of the country. Now, for the first time in
decades, the middle class is a minority, according to the Public Policy
Institute of California.
The Role of the Tech Oligarchs.
California
produces more new billionaires than any place this side of oligarchic Russia or
crony capitalist China. By some estimates the Golden State is home to one out
of every nine of the world’s billionaires. In 2011 the state was home to 90 billionaires, 20 more than second place New York and more than twice as many as
booming Texas.
The
state’s digital oligarchy, surely without intention, is increasingly driving
the state’s lurch towards feudalism. Silicon Valley’s wealth reflects the
fortunes of a handful of companies that dominate an information economy that
itself is increasingly oligopolistic. In
contrast to the traditionally conservative or libertarian ethos of the entrepreneurial class, the oligarchy is increasingly allied with the nominally
populist Democratic Party and its regulatory agenda. Along with the public
sector, Hollywood, and their media claque, they present California as “the spiritual inspiration” for modern “progressives” across the country.
Through
their embrace of and financial support for the state’s regulatory regime, the oligarchs
have made job creation in non tech-businesses—manufacturing, energy,
agriculture—increasingly difficult through “green energy” initiatives that are
also sure to boost already high utility costs. One critic, state Democratic
Senator Roderick Wright from heavily minority Inglewood, compares the state’s
regulatory regime to the “vig” or high interest charged by the Mafia, calling
it a major reason for disinvestment in many industries.
Yet
even in Silicon Valley, the expansion of prosperity has been extraordinarily
limited. Due to enormous losses suffered in the current tech bubble, tech job
creation in Silicon Valley has barely reached its 2000 level. In contrast,
previous tech booms, such as the one in the 90s, doubled the ranks of the tech
community. Some, like UC Berkeley economist Enrico Moretti, advance the dubious
claim that those jobs are more stable than those created in Texas. But even if
we concede that point for the moment,
the Valley’s growth primarily benefits its denizens but not most Californians.
Since the recession, California remains down something like 500,000 jobs, a 3.5
percent loss, while its Lone Star rival has boosted its employment by a
remarkable 931,000, a gain of more than 9 percent.
Much of
this has to do with the changing nature of California’s increasingly
elite—driven economy. Back in the 80s and even the 90s, the state’s tech sector
produced industrial jobs that sparked prosperity not only in places like Palo
Alto, but also in the more hardscrabble areas in San Jose and even inland
cities such as Sacramento. The once huge California aerospace industry,
centered in Los Angeles, employed hundreds of thousands, not only engineers but
skilled technicians, assemblers, and administrators.
This
picture has changed over the past decade. California’s tech manufacturing
sector has shrunk, and those employed in Silicon Valley are increasingly
well-compensated programmers, engineers and marketers. There has been little
growth in good-paying blue collar or even middle management jobs. Since 2001
state production of “middle skill” jobs—those that generally require two years
of training after high-school—have grown roughly half as quickly as the
national average and one-tenth as fast as similar jobs in arch-rival Texas.
“The
job creation has changed,” says Leslie Parks, a long-time San Jose economic
development official. “We used to be the whole food chain and create all sorts
of middle class jobs. Now, increasingly, we don’t design the future—we just
think about it. That makes some people rich, but not many.”
In the
midst of the current Silicon Valley boom, incomes for local Hispanics and
African-Americans, who together account for one third of the population, have
actually declined—18 percent for blacks and 5 percent for Latinos between 2009
and 2011, prompting one local booster to admit that “Silicon Valley is two
valleys. There is a valley of haves, and a valley of have-nots.”
The Geography of Inequality
Geography,
caste, and land ownership increasingly distinguish California’s classes from
one another. As Silicon Valley, San Francisco, and the wealthier suburbs in the
Bay Area have enjoyed steady income growth during the current bubble, much of
the state, notes economist Bill Watkins, endures Depression-like conditions,
with stretches of poverty more reminiscent of a developing country than the
epicenter of advanced capitalism.
Once
you get outside the Bay Area, unemployment in many of the state’s largest
counties—Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino, Fresno, and
Oakland—soars into the double digits. Indeed, among the 20 American cities with
the highest unemployment rates, a remarkable 11 are in California, led by
Merced’s mind-boggling 22 percent rate.
This
amounts to what conservative commentator Victor Davis Hanson has labeled
“liberal apartheid,” a sharp divide between a well-heeled, mostly white and
Asian population located along the California coast, and a largely poor,
heavily Latino working class in the interior. But the class divide is also
evident within the large metro areas,
despite their huge concentrations of affluent individuals. Los Angeles, for
example, has the third highest rate of inequality of the nation’s 51 largest
metropolitan areas, and the Bay Area ranks seventh.
The
current surge of California triumphalism, trumpeted mostly by the ruling
Democrats and their eastern media allies, seems to ignore the reality faced by
residents in many parts of the state. The current surge of wealth among the
coastal elites, boosted by rises in property, stock, and other assets, has staved
off a much feared state bankruptcy. Yet the the state’s more intractible
problems cannot be addressed if growth remains restricted to a handful of
favored areas and industries. This will become increasingly clear when, as is
inevitable, the current tech and property boom fades, depriving the state of
the taxes paid by high income individuals.
The gap
between the oligarchic class and everyone else seems increasingly permanent. A
critical component of assuring class mobility, California’s once widely admired
public schools were recently ranked near the absolute bottom in the country.
Think about this: despite the state’s huge tech sector, California eighth
graders scored 47th out of the 51 states in science testing. No wonder Mark
Zuckerberg and other oligarchs are so anxious to import “techno coolies” from
abroad.
As in
medieval times, land ownership, particularly along the coast, has become
increasingly difficult for those not in the upper class. In 2012, four
California markets—San Jose, San Francisco, San Diego, and Los Angeles—ranked
as the most unaffordable relative to income in the nation. The impact of these
prices falls particularly on the poor. According to the Center for Housing
Policy and National Housing Conference, 39 percent of working households in the
Los Angeles metropolitan area spend more than half their income on housing, as
do 35 percent in the San Francisco metro area—both higher than 31 percent in
the New York area and well above the national rate of 24 percent. This is
likely to get much worse given that California median housing prices rose 31
percent in the year ending May 2013. In the Bay Area the increase was an amazing 43 percent.
Even
skilled workers are affected by these prices. An analysis done for National
Core, a major developer of low income housing, found that prices in such areas
as Orange County are so high that even a biomedical engineer earning more than
$100,000 a year could not afford to buy a home there. This, as well as the
unbalanced economy, has weakened California’s hold on aspirational families,
something that threatens the very dream that has attracted millions to the state.
This is
a far cry from the 50s and 60s, when California abounded in new owner-occupied
single family homes. Historian Sam Bass Warner suggested that this constituted
“the glory of Los Angeles and an expression of its design for living.” Yet
today the L.A. home ownership rate, like that of New York, stands at about half
the national average of 65 percent. This is particularly true among working
class and minority households. Atlanta’s African-American home ownership rate
is approximately 40 percent above that of San Jose or Los Angeles, and
approximately 50 percent higher than San Francisco.
This
feudalizing trend is likely to worsen due to draconian land regulations that
will put the remaining stock of single family houses ever further out of reach,
something that seems related to a reduction in child-bearing in the state. As
the “Ozzie and Harriet” model erodes, many Californians end up as modern day
land serfs, renting and paying someone else’s mortgage. If they seek to start a
family, their tendency is to look elsewhere, ironically even in places such as
Oklahoma and Texas, places that once sent eager migrants to the Golden State.
Breaking Down the New Feudalism: The
Emerging Class Structure
The
emerging class structure of neo-feudalism, like its European and Asian
antecedents, is far more complex than simply a matter of the gilded “them” and
the broad “us.” To work as a system, as we can now see in California, we need
to understand the broader, more divergent class structure that is emerging.
The
Oligarchs: The swelling number of billionaires in the
state, particularly in Silicon Valley, has enhanced power that is emerging into
something like the old aristocratic French second estate. Through public
advocacy and philanthropy, the oligarchs have tended to embrace California’s
“green” agenda, with a very negative impact on traditional industries such as
manufacturing, agriculture, energy, and construction. Like the aristocrats who
saw all value in land, and dismissed other commerce as unworthy, they believe
all value belongs to those who own the increasingly abstracted information
revolution than has made them so fabulously rich.
The Clerisy: The
Oligarchs may have the money, but by themselves they cannot control a huge
state like California, much less America. Gentry domination requires allies
with a broader social base and their own political power. In the Middle Ages,
this role was played largely by the church; in today’s hyper-secular America,
the job of shaping the masses has fallen to the government apparat, the
professoriat, and the media, which together constitute our new Clerisy. The
Clerisy generally defines societal priorities, defends “right-thinking”
oligarchs, and chastises those, like traditional energy companies, that deviate
from their theology.
The New
Serfs: If current trends continue, the fastest growing class will
be the permanently property-less. This group includes welfare recipients and
other government dependents but also the far more numerous working poor. In the
past, the working poor had reasonable aspirations for a better life, epitomized
by property ownership or better prospects for their children. Now, with
increasingly little prospect of advancement, California’s serfs depend on the
Clerisy to produce benefits making their permanent impoverishment less
gruesome. This sad result remains inevitable as long as the state’s economy
bifurcates between a small high-wage, tech-oriented sector, and an expanding
number of lower wage jobs in hospitality, health services, and personal service
jobs. As a result, the working class, stunted in their drive to achieve the
California dream, now represents the largest portion of domestic migrants out of the state.
The
Yeomanry: In neo-feudalist California, the biggest losers
tend to be the old private sector middle class. This includes largely small
business owners, professionals, and skilled workers in traditional industries
most targeted by regulatory shifts and higher taxes. Once catered to by both
parties, the yeomanry have become increasingly irrelevant as California has
evolved into a one-party state where the ruling Democrats have achieved a
potentially permanent, sizable majority consisting largely of the clerisy and
the serf class, and funded by the oligarchs. Unable to influence government and
largely disdained by the clerisy, these middle income Californians are becoming
a permanent outsider group, much like the old Third Estate in early medieval
times, forced to pay ever higher taxes as well as soaring utility bills and
required to follow regulations imposed by people who often have little use for
their “middle class” suburban values.
The Political Implications of Neo-Feudalism
As
Marx, among others, has suggested, class structures contain within them the
seeds of their dissolution. In New York, a city that is arguably as feudal as
anything in California, the emergence of
mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio reflected growing antagonism—particularly among the remaining yeoman
and serf class— towards the gentry urbanism epitomized by Mayor Michael “Luxury
City” Bloomberg.
Yet
except for occasional rumbling from the left, neo-feudalism likely represents
the future. Certainly in California, Gov. Jerry Brown, a former Jesuit with the
intellectual and political skills needed to oversee a neo-feudal society,
remains all but unassailable politically. If Brown, or his policies, are to be
contested, the challenge will likely come from left-wing activists who find his
policies insufficiently supportive of the spending demanded by the clerisy and
the serfs or insufficiently zealous in their pursuit of environmental purity.
The
economy in California and elsewhere likely will determine the viability of
neo-feudalism. If a weaker economy forces state and local government budget
cutbacks, there could be a bruising conflict as the various classes fight over
diminishing spoils. But it’s perhaps more likely that we will see enough slow
growth so that Brown will be able to keep both the clerisy and the serfs
sufficiently satisfied. If that is the case, the new feudal system could shape
the evolution of the American class structure for decades to come.