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by nostrademons
833 days ago
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Sort of? California's economy is shaped like a pyramid scheme in many regards, and land speculation is one of them. It also filters down into local tax revenue (housing prices must continually increase for municipalities to balance their budget, because of Prop 13), the type of industries that can be located there (only the most high-margin can survive the cost of living), the sort of folks who live there (who generally want to get rich quick or admit defeat and move home), and the public discourse (which is always hyping up the next big thing). But in general the bottom of the pyramid lies outside California. All that money that eventually ends up in the pocket of California real estate speculators? Most of it comes from the pension funds and 401(k)s of ordinary workers in the rest of America, which invest in the darling companies of the day not realizing that everything is temporary. Those $2M ranch houses in Silicon Valley are bought by folks bringing in $500K in stock options per year, which is all fueled by their employers being worth $2T. California's problem today is that we're between pyramid schemes. Most of the old-line web/mobile/marketplace schemes have reached maturity and are nearing collapse, but new pyramid schemes like crypto and AI are just getting started. Until the dollars start flowing in earnest California will likely teeter and stagnate at the top. |
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