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Everyone knows living in California is more expensive than in other states – but a new report out makes a staggering total calculation of all the added costs and blames state politicians for imposing “unreasonable and completely unnecessary cost-of-living-penalty.”
“This report should be a wake-up call to all Californians that they are being unfairly punished by the bad policies imposed on them by their politicians – and they are literally paying the price for it,” says Dave McCulloch, Chairman of the Transparency Foundation – the non-profit, non-partisan group that published the study.
The Transparency Foundation’s Cost of California Report compares costs in every major household budget category between California and national averages – including for housing, utilities, food, gas, transportation, healthcare, insurance, childcare, and taxes.
“In every household budget category, the cost of living in California is exponentially higher than the national average – and costly mandates and bad policies are to blame,” says McCulloch.
Outside of the analysis of each category of living costs is a calculation made by the foundation to illustrate the effects of California’s high cost of living on a typical middle-class family.
The study shows that a typical middle-class family of three earning $130,000 a year faces a shocking “California Cost-of-Living Penalty” of $28,037.28 versus if they simply paid the national average of cost in each category.
What’s worse, the “California Cost-of-Living Penalty” has actually increased by $1,558.56 in 2023 compared to 2022. ($28,037.28 in 2023 vs. $26,478.72 in 2022). In fact, the growing cost penalty Californians are paying translates into an inflation rate penalty of an additional 5.9% of inflation over the national average of inflation.
The report also shows that Californians are falling further behind on their finances because of the state’s sky-high costs.
The typical middle-class family examined by the report ends up running an annual deficit of $28,833.72 versus a deficit of $796.44 if they simply had costs in line with national averages.
The Cost of California report documented the following cost penalty in each category:
The Transparency Foundation’s report reinforces what public polls are showing. The Los Angeles Times and Strategies 360 conducted a poll in the Spring of 2023 that showed 40% of Californians are seriously looking to move out of the state soon. Of those who were considering moving, 61% said it was due to how expensive it is to live in California, while 27% said they were considering moving due to the state’s politics.
McCulloch says incumbent state and local politicians should be ashamed of the financial hardships they have created for working families in California – and should be held accountable.
“California politicians have taken the typical middle-class family from financial security to deep indebtedness – and for what?” McCulloch asks.
“California politicians will argue their costly mandates and regulations have some sort of benefit, but they are never held accountable for quantifying those so-called benefits,” McCulloch notes.
With the Transparency Foundation’s report, however, the cost of the mandates and regulations can now be quantified in terms of direct financial costs that are being borne by all Californians. By calculating and making these costs more transparent, McCulloch hopes that Californians demand a true cost-benefit analysis on every California law, regulation and mandate that is imposed by the state that are not seen in other US states.
The Transparency Foundation’s report makes specific recommendations in each cost-of-living category on how California’s leaders can reduce costs.
Specifically the report recommends that policymakers adopt the same regulations as the lowest cost state in each cost category. To help in that process, the report recommends the creation of a state “Cost-of-Living Benchmark” Commission to identify ways to harmonize California regulations and policies to national ones in each cost category and propose the entire package of reforms for adoption or rejection by voters at the next state election.
The Transparency Foundation has announced it will update its Cost of California report annually – and will expand its research and advocacy programs to fight for common-sense reforms to reduce costs for Californians.