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Economic/Demographic Trends in California and Beyond. Planning for the Future. The Last Few Years…. Warning signs started in 2005 with a widening gap between home values and HH incomes.
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Economic/Demographic Trends in California and Beyond Planning for the Future
The Last Few Years… • Warning signs started in 2005 with a widening gap between home values and HH incomes. • Affordable housing was becoming an issue as supply was taken by purchasing of second homes and investment properties. • Initial favorable interest rates which encouraged refinancing and home equity loans. This brought more money into the economy. • Pressure on interest rates came later in year.
The Last Few Years… • In 2006, rising interest rates and higher inventories began to slow demand and home value appreciation. • Higher home inventories depressed the sales of new and existing homes. • Home value decline removed equity as a source of HH wealth. • Decline of housing market slowed growth in GDP and affected income and job growth. • Lower job and income growth, combinedwith rising interest rates impacted abilityto service mortgages.
The Last Few Years… • By mid 2008, the housing market was in decline. • An increase in home loan defaults was evident which caused lenders to tighten credit. • HH formation began to slow and population changes slowed. • Slowing of migration (both in and out). • The hottest housing markets were hit first and the hardest. Source: ESRI Demographic Update 2009/14 May 2009
Latest Research and Thoughts From: • Demographic Research Unit, California Department of Finance • USC School of Policy, Planning and Development • USC Population Dynamics Research Group • Southern California Association of Governments • Los Angeles County Economic Development Department • Hanley Wood Market Intelligence • California Association of Realtors • National Center for Education Statistics, U.S. Dept. of Education • ESRI Business Data, ESRI, Inc.
The Consensus is: Uncertainty in the Short Term Long Term Demographic Trends are More Clear
National Enrollment Trends Source: US Dept of Education, NCES Dec 2007
Regional-Population Change(2000-2008) Source: ESRI Business Data May 2009
Regional- Enrollment Change Source: US Dept of Education, NCES Dec 2007
Regional Source: US Dept of Education, NCES Dec 2007
Planning for the Future • Economists and demographers say that California will continue to grow. • How fast this will occur is dependent upon the recession. • Industries in CA are targets for growth. • Venture capital still seeks out CA firms. • The recession will end, but when?...
When Will the Recession End? • Many economists say between 2010-2011. • A few economists say longer to around 2012. • But if we’re planning long-term for California school growth to 2020 and beyond, the difference between 2010 and 2012 doesn’t matter…
Job Trends Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, CA EDD
Unemployment- April 2009 Source: ESRI Business Data April 2009
Foreclosures More about this later…
The Current Recession: Implications for California Growth • Larger job losses than in the 90s but, • Only a slight loss in share of U.S. jobs primarily due to housing/construction. • This is a NATIONAL recession – • Oregon, Nevada and Arizona have larger % job losses and nine states have higher unemployment rates
Future California Growth • California’s job, population and household growth depends on: • The amount of population and job growth nationwide • The attractiveness of California for entrepreneurs, workers and their families • The choices made by the two fastest growing demographic groups- over 55 and children/grandchildren of immigrants
What will the Future Bring? • Internal growth primarily from residents already in the state (in/out migration down). • Increased births from those who have settled since the 1980s (including the children and grandchildren of immigrants).
What will the Future Bring? • As in previous up cycles, population growth will occur where: • Relatively young populations already exist • Housing costs are moderate (low end housing will rebound first) • Areas where family formation are likely to occur • Location will vary widely within California.
California Enrollment We are here Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series
California Enrollment We are here Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series
What the Components of Pop Change? • Natural increase in population • Births – deaths • Net Migration
Components of Population Change Source: CA Dept of Finance 2007 County Race/Ethnic Pop Estimates
CA Components of Population Change Source: CA Dept of Finance 2007 County Race/Ethnic Pop Estimates
White Components of Population Change Source: CA Dept of Finance 2007 County Race/Ethnic Pop Estimates
Hispanic Components of Population Change Source: CA Dept of Finance 2007 County Race/Ethnic Pop Estimates
CA Age-Nativity PyramidArrival Decade and Generation Source: CA Demographic Futures USC School of Policy, Planning and Development
% Immigrant Share of Total PopulationCalifornia 1970 to 2030 Source: CA Demographic Futures USC School of Policy, Planning and Development
CA Projected Births Projected Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series
CA Projected Births by Ethnic Group Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series
CA Regional Projected Births Fresno, San Joaquin, Riverside, San Bernardino Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series
CA Regional Projected Births Los Angeles, Orange County, San Francisco, San Diego Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series
The Housing Market • Housing is the key to long-term continued growth in various areas • Opportunities are appearing: • Lower housing costs • Low interest rates (for now) • Demand still there
CA Median Price Existing Detached Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008
Housing Market • First-time Buyer Housing Affordability Index • California vs. U.S. 2003-2008 Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008
Housing Market • Sales Hit Bottom in 2007, up in 2008 and 2009 Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008
CA Ratio Median Home Price to Median HH Income Source: CA Dept of Finance
Housing Market • Unsold Inventory Index- July 2008 6.7 months and dropping Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008
Housing Market • Peak vs. July 2008 prices • Bay Area: • Sales down • Moderate median price declines • Central Valley: • Sales up dramatically • Large median price declines • Southern California: • Moderate to large sales increases • Large median price declines • Varies by county Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008
2009 CA Housing Market Outlook • According to California Assoc. of Realtors • Sales should increase 5-10% over 2008 (primarily low-end and foreclosures) • California median home price: • Prices stabilize in 2Q 2009 at earliest • Should correspond with foreclosures at/near peak • Affordability is good; availability of funds uncertain Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008
2009 CA Housing Market Outlook • CA Housing Market will stay stagnant for several more years… • Potential homebuyers waiting on the sideline…skittish about prices • Buyers unable to get loans even with stellar credit background • Financing not available for builders in current market Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008
Summary of K-12 Growth in CA Potential growth in the future will occur: • In areas with larger immigrant populations • Where the population driven by settlement of young families coupled with births • Areas with affordable housing
California Enrollment Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series
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