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<b>Southern California: record poverty and industrial decay<br>
</b>By Kim Saito<br>
13 July 2002<br>
<a href="http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/jul2002/cali-j13.shtml" eudora="autourl">http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/jul2002/cali-j13.shtml</a><br><br>
Several recently released reports paint a new, disturbing picture of
reality in Southern California, a reality that has been quietly
transformed over the past decade. Not the usual image of sunshine, wealth
and opportunity—but sharpening social polarization, record levels of
poverty and manufacturing decay. For decades, poverty was lower in the
entire state of California than in the rest of the country. Now that
relationship has been reversed.<br><br>
“We’re beginning to resemble much more a Third World society where a
class of people are stuck at the bottom,” said Ruth Milkman, director of
UCLA’s Institute for Labor and Employment. She has been leading an
ongoing study of the north-south divide between the industrial
development of Northern and Southern California.<br><br>
In May 1992 social tensions beneath the surface exploded in riots
following the Rodney King verdict. The media marked the tenth anniversary
with optimistic reports of economic revival in many parts of the city.
Things have gotten better, they claimed.<br><br>
However, recent reports issued by the Los Angeles County Economic
Development Corporation (LAEDC), the Public Policy Institute of
California, the Census 2000 data and UCLA’s Institute for Labor and
Employment expose these optimistic assertions.<br><br>
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