As we have discussed in the past, trade levels through the state are an important source of jobs, both through direct trade jobs along with jobs supported by the production of exports and use of imported components and materials. For example, although these jobs are now declining, the Los Angeles Region still remains the country’s leading manufacturing center and it remains in the position due in no small part to the presence of the ports and their ready access to production supplies and export markets.
Tariffs, however, are not the only factor affecting these job levels. Actions by both the state and local agencies continue to raise the costs of using the state’s ports, including actions that threaten to place artificial caps on overall trade activity. The state’s ports are already disadvantaged by higher costs relative to the rest of the US. Our recent study of the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach cited previous studies showing the cost of using those ports for discretionary cargo compared to shipping through the Panama Canal ranged from $60 to about $1,000 per container depending on the destination. While the time savings by shipping through California can offset these costs in many cases, it does not in all, as shown by the increasing shift
of this discretionary cargo to the other states.
And these costs are rising. While the current tariff uncertainty has provided another opportunity to blame California’s economic problems on yet another “Trump effect,” the state’s own actions are having a more fundamental detrimental effect on both competitive costs and the infrastructure required to support trade jobs. These include:
-
Indirect source proposals by South Coast and potentially San Diego air districts.
-
Air Resources Board Clean Truck requirements as they may be modified under the governor’s executive order launching ACC III.
-
Air Board’s At-Berth rules.
-
AB 98 (2024) restrictions on new warehouses.
-
Repeated litigation by the Attorney General on new warehouse construction.
-
Distribution centers are specifically removed from the CEQA reforms recently enacted in SB 131, even though this infrastructure is critical to overall trade jobs, the only growth industry in recent years for jobs attaining the goals of the “abundance agenda” especially through the provision of middle-class wage jobs to workers with a high school education or less.
|