The San Francisco metro area – where the $952,162 median home price is more than twice the state median – seems to have all the symptoms that the state’s legislative analyst office says causes a housing sickness across California’s coastal cities. High housing costs in those cities are caused by insufficient supply, which are in turn caused by community resistance, environmental objections and scarce land.
View ArticleCategories
- Employment
- Economy
- Public Finance
- Regulation
- Cost of Living
- Business Climate
- Income
- Energy
- Wages
- Housing
- Indicators
- Education
- Infrastructure
- Demographics
- Unemployment
- Green Jobs
- Business Migration
- Firms
- Uncategorized
- Sales
- Trade
- Legal Climate
- Economic Development
- Health Care
- Projections
- Economic Impact
- Job Growth
- Transportation
- Manufacturing
- Job Trends
- Government
- Population
- Leisure and Hospitality
- Tourism
- Other Services
- Professional, Scientific & Technical Skills
- Legislation
- Occupations
- National
- Transportation & Warehousing
- Information
- Street Insider
Industries
- Economy
- Government
- Manufacturing
- Utilities
- Information
- Construction
- Trade
- Transportation
- Retail
- Warehousing
- Healthcare & Social Assistance
- Accommodation & Food Services
- Mining
- Education and Health
- Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing & Hunting
- Forestry
- Transportation & Warehousing
- Agriculture
- Fishing
- Hunting
- Financial Activities
- Finance & Insurance
- Professional and Business Services
- Leisure and Hospitality
- Health Care
- Social Assistance
- Wholesale Trade
- Other Services
- Educational Services
- Natural Resources
- Professional, Scientific, & Technical Skills
- Arts, Entertainment, & Recreation
- Remediation
- Waste Management
- Support
- Administration
- Farming
- Real Estate & Rental & Leasing