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Planning for the Future

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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Planning for the Future

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  1. Economic/Demographic Trends in California and Beyond Planning for the Future

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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

  5. So Where Do We Go From Here?

  6. 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.

  7. The Consensus is: Uncertainty in the Short Term Long Term Demographic Trends are More Clear

  8. National Enrollment Trends Source: US Dept of Education, NCES Dec 2007

  9. Regional-Population Change(2000-2008) Source: ESRI Business Data May 2009

  10. Regional- Enrollment Change Source: US Dept of Education, NCES Dec 2007

  11. Regional Source: US Dept of Education, NCES Dec 2007

  12. 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?...

  13. 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…

  14. Where are we compared with our last recession?

  15. CA Job Loss in 1990s Recession

  16. CA Share of U.S. Jobs (1990s recession)

  17. CA Share of U.S. Jobs (1990-2008)

  18. CA Job Loss Then and NowMonths After Recession Started

  19. Job Trends Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, CA EDD

  20. Unemployment- April 2009 Source: ESRI Business Data April 2009

  21. Foreclosures More about this later…

  22. 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

  23. 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

  24. 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).

  25. 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.

  26. California Enrollment We are here Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series

  27. California Enrollment We are here Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series

  28. What the Components of Pop Change? • Natural increase in population • Births – deaths • Net Migration

  29. Components of Population Change Source: CA Dept of Finance 2007 County Race/Ethnic Pop Estimates

  30. CA Components of Population Change Source: CA Dept of Finance 2007 County Race/Ethnic Pop Estimates

  31. White Components of Population Change Source: CA Dept of Finance 2007 County Race/Ethnic Pop Estimates

  32. Hispanic Components of Population Change Source: CA Dept of Finance 2007 County Race/Ethnic Pop Estimates

  33. CA Age-Nativity PyramidArrival Decade and Generation Source: CA Demographic Futures USC School of Policy, Planning and Development

  34. % Immigrant Share of Total PopulationCalifornia 1970 to 2030 Source: CA Demographic Futures USC School of Policy, Planning and Development

  35. CA Projected Births Projected Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series

  36. CA Projected Births by Ethnic Group Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series

  37. CA Regional Projected Births Fresno, San Joaquin, Riverside, San Bernardino Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series

  38. CA Regional Projected Births Los Angeles, Orange County, San Francisco, San Diego Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series

  39. 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

  40. CA Median Price Existing Detached Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008

  41. Housing Market • First-time Buyer Housing Affordability Index • California vs. U.S. 2003-2008 Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008

  42. Housing Market • Sales Hit Bottom in 2007, up in 2008 and 2009 Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008

  43. CA Ratio Median Home Price to Median HH Income Source: CA Dept of Finance

  44. Housing Market • Unsold Inventory Index- July 2008 6.7 months and dropping Source: CA Assoc. of Realtors CA Outlook Sept 2008

  45. 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

  46. 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

  47. 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

  48. 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

  49. California Enrollment Source: CA Dept of Finance 2008 Series

  50. Thank You For Your Attendance Questions?

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