News

Sacramento will still get a soccer stadium in the Railyards, officials said. But the recent protest made the city a test case ...
Despite California's expansion of clean energy use, Texas leads in producing the most electricity from renewable energy ...
Policy analyst Joel Kotkin joins host Larry Mantle to discuss the current economic climate in California and how it became so difficult for business to operate here. Kotkin assigns responsibility ...
The accounting industry is closely watching the densely populated Golden State as any licensure changes there are expected to ...
A clash between federal immigration policy and California's push for housing reform could jeopardize efforts to address the ...
This year, California’s growth will slow to 2%, and L.A. County’s economy will expand by just 1.8% — close to the nation’s 1.9%, the LAEDC predicted Wednesday in its annual forecast ...
California needs a statewide economic development plan to spread jobs beyond the Bay Area and Southern California, and to counter claims that the state is bad for business. Assembly Bill 2596 by ...
The UCLA forecast saw the California rate averaging 5.3% in the first three months of next year, then dropping to 4.9% in the spring and 4.4% in the summer. The rate is projected to stay at ...
Inflation, which is raging at levels unseen in 40 years, is threatening to stifle economic development. Jobs are a recession’s most obvious impact. Consumers spend less and corporate sales slow.
California has often been at the country’s economic forefront. Now, as fears of a national recession continue to nag, the state is hoping not to lead the way there.
Last month, Gov. Newsom announced the creation of the California Jobs First Council focused on streamlining the state’s economic and workforce development programs to create more jobs, faster ...
Today, our state officially ties the longest economic expansion on record – 113 months of job growth. While that is something we should be proud of, the story behind that number is more complex.