pavlov 7 hours ago

California’s GDP is now twice as large as Russia’s.

Yet the President of the United States seems to spend a lot of time trying to make Russians happy, and zero time making Californians happy.

  • jandrewrogers 6 hours ago

    On a per capita basis, California still has some work to do. Washington, Massachusetts, and New York are all significantly higher. No one should get bonus points for having a large population.

  • Afforess 7 hours ago

    California should acquire some nuclear weapons then.

    • smallnix 7 hours ago

      I doubt its realistic for powerful states like California to cecede. Is there a path from here to a near (think 50 years) future, where California and the US, sans California, exist?

      • fifilura 7 hours ago

        I don't want the US to break up.

        But I wonder if it wouldn't be more healthy for you if the states grew a bit more independent.

        It would give the president less power to decide exactly how schools and universities should be run or would open up for social welfare reforms in the states that want it.

        • bigstrat2003 6 hours ago

          It would absolutely be more healthy. One of the big problems facing our country is that we have centralized so much power in the federal government (which wasn't meant to have it), that everything the federal government does becomes super contentious. The election of a president should be, in a better world, relatively boring because the real action is happening at the state or even local levels. But instead, the president has so much power to affect things that the elections become a desperate fight as people perceive it to be an existential threat if the wrong person gets elected.

          It's been a long process to get that much power in the federal government - it goes back at least to FDR (so, near a hundred years now), and I've seen arguments that it goes all the way back to the Civil War. But I do firmly believe that the centralizing of power is destroying us. We got away with it when the nation was more united in its values and culture, and even then it could be contentious. But today vast swathes of the country share little to nothing in the way of values or culture. Of course we can't get along when such widely disparate groups of people are tied together and a single government body is controlling large portions of their lives.

          • janalsncm 6 hours ago

            > the real action is happening at the state or even local levels

            A lot of it is. For example the California housing shortage? It’s all state and local. But the same single family zoning pattern played out in many places.

        • remarkEon 7 hours ago

          Fun to see people derive Federalism from first principles.

          • Aeolun 6 hours ago

            I mean, a United States of America would be better. But not the Bickering States of America that exists. Might be better to have them all go their own way.

            • remarkEon 6 hours ago

              Yes, this was the pre-Civil War intent. There's a vast archive of history here that elaborates in great detail about how the Founders expected the country to be run. All that changed in the late 19th century, and was codified in the early 20th.

        • xtiansimon an hour ago

          > “But I wonder if it wouldn't be more healthy for you if the states grew a bit more independent.”

          Land borders and water rights. I don’t see it working out.

        • mcphage 3 hours ago

          > It would give the president less power to decide exactly how schools and universities should be run

          He doesn’t have that power. But he’s taking it, and the parties who are supposed to be stopping him are uninterested in doing their job.

          • fifilura an hour ago

            But it is the same with the department of education that DOGE is threatening to close down.

            This may actually be a good thing (although they missed the chance to gain some confidence by doing it in a chaotic way).

            I am certain that California could run their own DOE.

      • anothernewdude 7 hours ago

        I doubt its realistic for powerful colonies like America to declare independence.

      • RobRivera 7 hours ago

        I don't think cessation was the implication

      • labster 7 hours ago

        Why secede when we can just get our state sold to Denmark?

    • kubb 7 hours ago

      They should promise him a cut.

    • aoanevdus 5 hours ago

      Supposedly there are hundreds in Concord.

    • panick21_ 6 hours ago

      Nuclear weapons aren't a magical cloak that when you put it everybody has to do what you say. Its one of many consideration in foreign policy.

      And the idea that you have to make 'Russia happy' because they have nukes, if fucking beyond dumb.

    • ninetyninenine 7 hours ago

      All our GDP is in software. We don't know how to make anything except AI and web apps. We wouldn't know what to do with a nuke.

      • cenamus 7 hours ago

        In that case, all of Russia GDP is oil and natural gas

        • remarkEon 7 hours ago

          Which you can turn into energy, TBD if you can do that with a web app.

          • Ygg2 6 hours ago

            You definitely can turn cryptocurrency into heat. That's thermal energy.

            • Ygg2 16 minutes ago

              It seems my sarcasm was not detected. Maybe I should have said AI.

      • bbarnett 7 hours ago

        Incredibly wrong.

        Hollywood is still a thing. Manufacturing, yes manufacturing. Agriculture. The Bay Area is a fraction of that GDP, and a small geographical part of California.

        • numpad0 5 hours ago

          Something is seriously broken with this world now that completely normal and well educated person like GP is not realizing his words aren't making sense. Apple Park to LLNL is under an hour's drive. You guys can probably achieve nuclear independence in a day if needed.

          It just can't be done economically, because yields of a nuke(pun intended) don't immediately map onto economical values. Not just immensely positive or negative, but actually tangential to the currency dimensions.

        • AlotOfReading 6 hours ago

          Agriculture is essentially a rounding error on California's GDP, <$60B or <2%. There are individual companies more economically significant than the entire agricultural industry.

          The disproportionate power relative to its economic significance is a political choice.

        • grugagag 6 hours ago

          Hollywood is becoming irrelevant fast. At least that’s been the trend as of late.

          • oblio 6 hours ago

            That's transitioning to streaming services which still have studios.

      • rafale 7 hours ago

        Ask Nevada.

  • hackyhacky 7 hours ago

    California is anti-American and disloyal, because they voted for the other party. /s

    Russia, on the other hand, supports the President, so they deserve to be rewarded.

    • grugagag 6 hours ago

      Plus they helped and continue to help the president dismantle or incapacitate his own government.

    • Ylpertnodi 30 minutes ago

      >Russia, on the other hand, supports the President, so they deserve to be rewarded.

      You forgot the /SS [Not being historical, damn autocorrect, i mean hysterical, but comments; comments, they're a beautiful thing, comments - i meant /sarcasm, sarcasm. Beautiful sarcasm, they had sarcasm-such a beautiful word - two hundred years ago...etc, etc.

captainmuon 7 hours ago

It's funny that the list includes both California and the US.

It would be interesting to compare economies of the same scale, regardless of legal status: If you are considering the US and China, maybe you should include the whole of the EU. And if you are looking at Germany, Japan, ... It makes sense to not only include California, but also to split up other countries. I'm curious how high up Guandong or Shanghai would be for example.

The fact that the US and China show up as single countries (and not "continents"/regions) whereas the EU shows up as a bunch of "small" countries is source of a lot of inferiority complex in Europe.

  • carlmr 6 hours ago

    >The fact that the US and China show up as single countries (and not "continents"/regions) whereas the EU shows up as a bunch of "small" countries is source of a lot of inferiority complex in Europe.

    On the one hand, yes, you're right, the EU is more powerful economically as a whole than as individual states. But on the other hand the individual states are a bit less unified than the US or China. So they are a bit more individual in the first place.

    • jillesvangurp 6 hours ago

      The EU is still fairly new. It's only been around in its current form for a few decades or so.

      EU countries still have:

      - their own laws and constitutions

      - their own foreign policy, embassies, intelligence services, armies, etc.

      - their own taxation; there actually is no EU tax (though there is some pressure to create such a thing)

      - their own policies for education, healthcare, social security, taxation, trade, etc.

      - their own currency in some cases (e.g. Denmark, Sweden, Poland and many other eastern European countries)

      - border disputes like Cyprus, the Balkans (several former Yugoslav countries are members or aspiring to be). And though not part of it, you might count Greenland here as it is Danish with a special status.

      As a trade block, the EU is pretty large. And the sphere of influence also includes former soviet states not part of the EU, Turkey, Northern Africa, etc. But it doesn't speak with one voice like the US and China tend to do. Also there is a lot of division on topics like e.g. the Ukraine war, energy, and a lot of other topics.

      • Symbiote 5 hours ago

        Each US state also has

        - its own laws and constitution, search "Constitution of California"

        - its own taxation (e.g. sales tax differs between states, just as VAT rates differ between EU countries; Americans pay income tax to their state as well as the federation)

        - its own policies for education, healthcare (not sure about social security, and not for trade)

        - some US states have border disputes with other states, e.g. Tennessee vs Georgia (Possibly the EU does not, they must be resolved before joining, though I can't find a good article on this).

        - the USA as a whole has border disputes with Canada

        The EU presents more division on more topics than the USA, but the USA isn't united on e.g. energy policy.

  • Dagonfly 6 hours ago

    > I'm curious how high up Guandong or Shanghai would be for example

    Surprisingly far down: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_first-level_administra...

    California, Texas, England, New York, Guangdong, Jiangsu. Both with slightly smaller GDP than Russia, the 11th largest economy.

    More interesting is the PPP table where Guangdong is close to California.

  • eGP9jDq_nw 6 hours ago

    >The fact that the US and China show up as single countries (and not "continents"/regions) whereas the EU shows up as a bunch of "small" countries is source of a lot of inferiority complex in Europe. is it? I've only ever seen USians push the "country of europe" thing

  • standardUser 7 hours ago

    The EU is very frequently included in data comparing nation states, along with it's individual members. It's the only supranational organization usually included on those kinds of lists, though sometimes you'll see groups like the G20.

    • simonask 6 hours ago

      The EU is also the only organization of its kind on the planet. It's not a federal state, but it's also way, way more integrated and unified than something like the G20, OECD, etc.

      It's also the only thing that can work in Europe. Anything smaller would make Europe irrelevant on the global stage, and something much more invasive would erase Europe as we know it.

      The current mood in smaller European countries is that even though many are skeptical of French and German influence, our interests align most of the time, especially now that the US has succumbed to fascism and stupidity.

ksajadi 8 hours ago

I wish we had the same outsized influence over the US federal policy as well.

  • Manfred 7 hours ago

    Tying economic output to political power gets hairy pretty quickly. You incentivize states to put economic outcome before the wellbeing of the citizens and give states with rare natural resources more power than those that rely on value produced by a workforce.

    • dyauspitr 7 hours ago

      Tying population to political power definitely makes sense though.

      • simonask 6 hours ago

        In general yes, but all democracies have this guiding principle, including the EU, where small nations have much more electoral power per capita than larger nations.

        For example, each Maltese member of the European Parliament is elected by 90,000 voters in Malta. Each German member is elected by ~878,000 voters in German, meaning each Maltese citizen has about 10x more power than each German citizen.

        In this case, the German "bloc" is still vastly more powerful, but the disproportionate representation is important to ensure the loyalty of small nations, who are always incentivized to navigate much narrower interests.

      • platevoltage 7 hours ago

        I wouldn't say the US Senate and Electoral College make much sense.

        • bigstrat2003 6 hours ago

          I think they make an incredible amount of sense. The population centers don't deserve to dictate how the entire country works just because they pack a ton of people in. For the Senate, it's important to have a body where all the sovereign states get equal say, because after all they are supposed to be the primary unit of government. Not only that, but the fact that there's equal representation in the Senate is the social contract on which this country is founded, without which California wouldn't even exist.

          The electoral college is flawed but I also find it better than the alternative. It's important that the president should represent a wide variety of perspectives in the country, not just pander to the population of the n biggest cities and call it a day. The people living in small or unimportant states deserve to have a president who gives a damn about them, too. Ultimately I think both of these mechanisms are important ones to ensure that the country doesn't turn into a classic tyranny of the majority, which is something I value quite a bit.

          • janalsncm 6 hours ago

            As it stands a person in California has less say than a person in Wyoming. Yes California as a group has more say but that is to be expected because it has more people.

          • CalRobert 6 hours ago

            “Rural centers don't deserve to dictate how the entire country works just because they pack a ton of land in”

            Also works though

        • perilunar 3 hours ago

          In Australia we had a Prime Minister publicly refer to our Senate as “unrepresentative swill”.

  • raverbashing 7 hours ago

    Honestly 80% of California's problems are self-inflicted

    NIMBYs limiting growth.

    Crazy crime handling policies in SF (which are getting reverted now).

    Cities outside the main centers (SFBA, LA, etc) dying.

    Complete political ineptitude for things like HSR

    No wonder they're losing population

    • janalsncm 6 hours ago

      I agree with you about many of those problems but those things are also true in any other US state. It’s not like Texas or Tennessee or Minnesota have huge HSR networks that California doesn’t.

      Austin is quickly building more housing though, which I am a fan of.

udev4096 7 hours ago

And Japan is still the most peaceful place to live!

maxglute 6 hours ago

Or how JP "plummeted" from 6 trillion economy to 4 trillion because their FX went from 100:1 USD to 160:1 (at peak last year) now 140:1. Still eaking slow growth in yen terms.

JP can still be 1/3 larger than california US compels them to appreciate. I think 140 is probably a good balance for JP exports (high tech) and imports (energy, commodities/inputs).

Or Trump makes USD weaker.

ninetyninenine 7 hours ago

The title almost implies that CA had some unnatural acceleration to put it past japan. I think it's more that japan has been declining.

This won't last once the US population starts declining. We've been held afloat by immigration but even that's running out.

Japan was ahead of the curve in terms of modernity. Looking at them is almost like looking at our own future.

  • throwaway473825 7 hours ago

    In 2023, Germany overtook Japan as the world's third largest economy. This year, India is projected to overtake Japan as the world's fourth largest economy. I wonder if the article has taken India into account.

  • rsynnott 4 hours ago

    It's not even really that, I think; given that it's nominal GDP, it's likely mostly currency fluctuations, likely taken at end of 2024. If so, the nominal GDP situation has likely reverted, as the dollar has fallen about 9% vs the yen since the start of the year.

    This is one of the reasons that nominal GDP isn't all that useful a metric.

  • Aeolun 6 hours ago

    Japan’s population will start declining faster than the US though xD we have maybe 10 years before basically the entirety rural population starts dying from old age.

  • Ylpertnodi 39 minutes ago

    >We've been held afloat by immigration but even that's running out.

    'Running out' - cute euphemism for 'you're not welcome', and very much worser: 'deportation'.

  • Axsuul 7 hours ago

    The US has immigration

    • platevoltage 7 hours ago

      Japan might want to consider it soon too.

      • ninetyninenine an hour ago

        Japan already is. Going to Japan today you’ll see that it’s an extremely multicultural country loaded with tourists and immigrants.

      • remarkEon 7 hours ago

        Why?

        • abenga 5 hours ago

          Because the country will die soon (in civilization time scale)?

          • Jensson an hour ago

            With that argument the world will die soon, migration is just a temporary measure in civilization time scale. So better fix it now than push it to the next generation.

    • remarkEon 6 hours ago

      Magically, immigration is the _one_ supply shock that has zero impact on wages. Or, the _one_ demand shock that has zero impact on housing prices. The only impact it apparently does have is to make the GDP number go up.

up2isomorphism 7 hours ago

[flagged]

  • NewJazz 7 hours ago

    Have you looked in Temecula?

  • refurb 7 hours ago

    While a low effort comment, it does touch on an important topic.

    Imagine if CA was run with the kind of efficiency that Singapore or South Korea was run. Clean, safe streets. Modern infrastructure.

    Instead we get a state government that is going to waste the goose that laid the golden egg. The high taxes paid disappear in a black hole centered in Sacramento.

    CA reminds me of New Jersey. Other states used to be jealous of New Jersey's economy, yet the riches were frittered away by an inefficient government.

    • zdragnar 6 hours ago

      Panhandling / begging and sleeping in public places is punishable with prison time (assuming you can't pay the massive fine) in Singapore.

      California wouldn't be California if it was run like Singapore or if it had the 9-9 chaebol work culture like South Korea.

      • janalsncm 6 hours ago

        > punishable with prison time

        The police can force you to stay in a shelter, yes. But they have them available. Most very poor people in SG stay in subsidized housing.

        In SF there literally are not enough shelter beds. If you were homeless today you would have to sleep on the street.

  • iagooar 7 hours ago

    I have probably never felt more insecure (and disgusted at the same time) in a Western country, the way I felt on the streets of LA. Not all of them, of course, some are obviously well guarded - which in turn makes me think the government and city council is not doing a great job really.

    Is the situation as bad in San Francisco?

    • Axsuul 7 hours ago

      LA is gigantic. There are more safe streets there than most major cities in the world.

      • Aeolun 6 hours ago

        Tokyo begs to differ

        I was going to use some numbers but because Japan doesn’t really do street names it wasn’t really comparable.

        Tokyo has 25k km of streets. LA has 9k miles.

        Edit: Missed the ‘most’, sorry.

    • RobRivera 7 hours ago

      SF is better than I remember 6 years ago.

      Purely anecdotal

    • ninetyninenine 7 hours ago

      LA is freaking large. Depending on where you are some places are more disgusting then others while other places are completely pristine.

      SF is worse. But SF is also tiny.

suraci 8 hours ago

[flagged]

  • AngryData 7 hours ago

    That would be silly, California is what it is today because it is part of the United States. The ports by themselves bring in a lot of money and being another country introduces two new borders that the United States would want to avoid and go around. It also has a lot of money in the financial sector, which would gain significant extra barriers and costs with the rest of US businesses if it wasn't part of the US. Plus the only places where you get majority support for that sort of thing in more dense urban areas and losing large chunks of the state's landmass would definitely hurt the California economy.

  • kryptiskt 7 hours ago

    California's economy is so big because it's part of the American economy. California gets credited for Google, but most of the suckers clicking on ads and making Google rich aren't in California, most of Google's workers aren't in California. Cutting off California from that would be way dumber than Brexit.

  • atarian 8 hours ago

    And then China steps in to protect California from getting annexed by the United States.

    • oblio 6 hours ago

      China isn't annexing Germany any time soon, for example. California could afford a solid defensive military.

  • hurray-sandbag 8 hours ago

    If California separated from the US, most of California would separate from California and rejoin the US.

    Read about the "State of Jefferson" movement, etc. The Coastal cities in California are really a completely different place from the rest of the state, and the rest of the state is pretty dissatisfied with this union.

    • zippyman55 7 hours ago

      The people in Jefferson County come off as pretty loony.

    • oblio 6 hours ago

      That thing only has an estimated 3 million people, and that's including a lot of Oregon.

      Surprisingly, those Coastal cities have a lot of people (common theme in the US).

  • RobRivera 7 hours ago

    >Like Taiwan

    I see what you did there.

  • ninetyninenine 7 hours ago

    Taiwan is not free.

  • derelicta 7 hours ago

    I personally yearn for the balkanisation of the US. That's unironically why I think a TEXIT would be very beneficial to the rest of the world. The more the Empire fights itself, the weaker it is, and the freer the world becomes.

  • swarnie 8 hours ago

    One good earthquake and you might get your wish.

    • Mountain_Skies 7 hours ago

      Otisburg is going to be the new place to be.

    • suraci 7 hours ago

      why, i don't want anyone to get hurt