• Link to LinkedIn
  • Link to Facebook
  • Link to Instagram
  • Link to Youtube
  • Link to X
SUBSCRIBE TO NEWSLETTER
Joel Kotkin
  • About
    • Events
  • Media
    • In the News
    • Videos
  • Books
  • Articles
    • Demographics
    • Urban Affairs
    • The Economy
    • Politics
    • Rural Policy
    • Reports
    • Religion
    • California
  • Podcast
  • Speaking
  • Contact
  • Click to open the search input field Click to open the search input field Search
  • Menu Menu
You are here: Home1 / Articles2 / California

Can California Win the New Space Race?

October 8, 2019/in California, Politics, The Economy

California may have gotten its global allure from the Gold Rush and the movies, but it’s planes, missiles and now drones and spaceships that have underpinned the state’s industrial emergence.

Today, after decades of rapid decline, California’s aerospace employment is growing again, albeit slowly, providing a new chance for the state’s productive economy.

Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/aldrin-lunar-surface_nasa-e1570401470645.jpg 390 489 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2019-10-08 07:45:242019-11-10 14:10:42Can California Win the New Space Race?

Property and Democracy in America

September 23, 2019/in California, Demographics, Politics, The Economy, Urban Affairs

To understand how American democracy has worked, and why its future may be limited, it’s critical to look at the issue of property. From early on, the country’s republican institutions have rested on the notion of dispersed ownership of land — a striking departure from the realities of feudal Europe, east Asia or the Middle East. Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/bigstock-Friendly-neighborhood-a-child-15280499.jpg 237 355 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2019-09-23 07:53:332019-09-22 13:55:02Property and Democracy in America

Transit Planners Want to Make Your Life Worse

September 16, 2019/in California, Politics, Urban Affairs

In our system of government, the public sector is, well, supposed to serve the public. But increasingly the bureaucracies at the state and local level increasingly seek to tell the public how to live, even if the result is to make life worse.

Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/muni-rail-san-francisco.jpg 427 640 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2019-09-16 07:20:472019-09-15 13:21:25Transit Planners Want to Make Your Life Worse

Public Schools Should Be Places of Learning, Not Propaganda

August 26, 2019/in California, Politics

California likes to think of itself as the brain center of the universe, but increasingly much of that intellectual content comes from somewhere else. Once a leader in educational innovation and performance, California is now toward the bottom of the pack.

Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/california-students-protest-education-costs.jpg 300 372 Joel Kotkin and Doug Havard /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin and Doug Havard2019-08-26 10:10:102019-08-26 10:10:10Public Schools Should Be Places of Learning, Not Propaganda

Will The Democrats End Up Saving The California Republican Party?

August 15, 2019/in California, Politics

Left to its own devices, California’s Republican Party would be ready to be embalmed for display at the Museum of Natural History. But there’s one last hope for the state GOP: the growing lunacy among Democrats.

Many positions now taken for granted by Democrats should threaten their hold on the bulk of California’s middle- and working-class voters.

Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/ca-gov-newsom.jpg 400 495 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2019-08-15 17:36:232019-08-15 17:37:00Will The Democrats End Up Saving The California Republican Party?

California Can’t Afford to Be an Economic One-Trick Pony

July 8, 2019/in California, The Economy

For the past decade, the soaring stock prices and nosebleed valuations of Silicon Valley’s IPOs and tech sector unicorns has been a boon for California, helping create a record budget surplus of almost $22 billion.

Yet this bonanza has occurred just as the state’s overall job creation, once among the country’s leaders, has slowed to a more middle of the road status, well below the rates for key competitors such as Nevada, Arizona, Washington State and Texas. On a GDP basis, according to the most recent federal data, Texas by the last quarter of 2018 was growing nearly three times as fast.

Slower growth could expose California even more to its growing, and unhealthy, dependence on the relatively small, in terms of employment, tech sector.

Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Googleplex_HQ_sml.jpg 400 495 Joel Kotkin and Marshall Toplansky /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin and Marshall Toplansky2019-07-08 08:44:072019-07-08 08:45:32California Can’t Afford to Be an Economic One-Trick Pony

California’s Progressive Betrayal

June 16, 2019/in California, Politics, The Economy

California’s left-wing policies hurt working-class and middle-class residents.

The recent California Democratic Party convention in San Francisco exposed the divide between the state’s progressive and working-class voters. Progressives, in their militant certitude, support left-wing policies that often don’t affect them; it’s the working class that suffers the consequences of these proposals. But the Green New Deal, widely embraced by party leaders, pushed too far, triggering a backlash at the convention. The state’s private-sector labor unions, notably the building trades, organized a “Blue Collar Revolution” protest against the Democrats’ climate legislation. Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/california-dem-politics-middle-class-pushback.jpg 400 495 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2019-06-16 14:25:082019-06-20 15:01:48California’s Progressive Betrayal

Densification Efforts Like SB50 Are The Wrong Fix to California’s Housing Problem

May 13, 2019/in California

For decades California’s regulatory and tax policies have undermined our middle class, driving millions out of this most favored state. Perhaps nowhere is this clearer than in a drive that seeks to destroy the single-family neighborhoods preferred by the state’s middle-income households.

SB50, introduced by state Sen. Scott Wiener, would allow division of existing houses to duplexes, triplexes and fourplexes “by right” in single-family neighborhoods. Further, higher density apartments could be built-in single-family neighborhoods close to transit. This could lead to significant house value losses by families for whom their home is their greatest single asset.

Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/wiener_housing_SB50.jpg 641 855 Joel Kotkin and Wendell Cox /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin and Wendell Cox2019-05-13 09:12:282019-05-13 09:14:09Densification Efforts Like SB50 Are The Wrong Fix to California’s Housing Problem

Clippers Offer A Better Model For SoCal Than The Lakers

April 15, 2019/in California, Urban Affairs

This year’s basketball season, with the collapse of the Lakers and the surprising rise of the Clippers, poses a metaphor for the region. On the one hand, there’s the Laker obsession with the “star system” and impressing outsiders, notably on the East Coast. The Clipper model, reflecting a culture of hard work and teamwork, relies not only on celebrity but the raising of often obscure people into prominence.

Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/USA_CA_LosAngeles_StaplesCenter.jpg 1200 1600 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2019-04-15 08:15:252019-04-15 08:26:27Clippers Offer A Better Model For SoCal Than The Lakers

Candidate of Big Tech

April 11, 2019/in California, Politics

In the free-form, roller derby race for the Democratic presidential nomination, few candidates are better positioned than California’s Senator Kamala Harris. She is a fresh and attractive mid-fifties face, compared with septuagenarian frontrunners Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders, or the aging progressive Elizabeth Warren. Part Asian-Indian, part Afro-Caribbean, and female, Harris seems the frontrunner in the intersectionality sweepstakes that currently largely defines Democratic politics. Yet the national obsession with ethnicity and novelty obscures the more important reality: Harris is also the favored candidate of the tech and media oligarchy now almost uniformly aligned with the Democratic Party. Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Kamala_Harris_April_21_Los_Angeles_Town_Hall.jpg 400 495 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2019-04-11 12:32:562019-04-11 12:32:56Candidate of Big Tech
Page 18 of 35«‹1617181920›»
Search Search

Subscribe to Feed

Subscribe to RSS   follow us in feedly

Recent Articles

  • Why Latinos Are California’s Best Hope for a Sane Housing Market
  • Retiring the Nutty Professor
  • The American Revolution at 250: a Legacy to Fulfill
  • The American Revolution at 250
  • The Myth of Europe’s Fascist Revival

Joel has spoken at many leading universities, business groups, government organizations and more.

INVITE JOEL TO SPEAK

STAY CONNECTED

Join the conversation at Twitter
or Facebook. Visit our YouTube
channel or subscribe to RSS
to read our latest articles.

      Subscribe to RSS  follow us in feedly

Recent Articles

  • Exurban and inland California communities are the most affordable of the state's housing markets.
    Why Latinos Are California’s Best Hope for a Sane Housing MarketJune 29, 2026 - 11:45 am
  • Publicity photo for 1963 movie, The Nutty ProfessorPublic Domain
    Retiring the Nutty ProfessorJune 26, 2026 - 11:35 am
  • The American Revolution left us a legacy to fulfill.
    The American Revolution at 250: a Legacy to FulfillJune 24, 2026 - 11:35 am
  • Painting of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, by John Trumbull, 1819
    The American Revolution at 250June 22, 2026 - 11:40 am

Topics

  • Books
  • California
  • Demographics
  • In the News
  • Podcast
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Reports
  • Rural Policy
  • The Economy
  • Urban Affairs
© Copyright – Joel Kotkin | Site Admin
  • About
  • Media
  • Books
  • Articles
  • Podcast
  • Speaking
  • Contact
Scroll to top Scroll to top Scroll to top