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Numbers Don’t Tell the Whole Story: The Mystery Behind California’s World Economy Status


Updated: May 03, 2025 09:51

Image Source: The Economic Times
California's recent jump over Japan to take the role of the world's fourth-largest economy, with a GDP of $4.1 trillion, has been a subject of news and brought out bold statements from Governor Gavin Newsom. He attributes the growth of the state to its technological, agricultural, and innovation leadership, promoting California as an economic powerhouse in the global economy. The 6% growth rate of the state in 2024 surpassed the U.S., China, and Germany, which further boosted the story of California's economic superiority.
 
But this ranking is symbolic rather than substantive. It is not, as in independent countries, an independent state-with its own foreign policy, international trade agreements to negotiate, monetary policy to implement, and domestic policies not derivative of national-level policies. Even its economic accomplishments, though startling, are directly dependent on national policies and foreign market forces. And further consideration of federal tariff policies, evoked by Newsom himself, reminds us again of how vulnerable the state continues to be to Washington, D.C. determinations.
 
Although California's economic scale is certain, the suggestion that it is the "fourth-largest economy in the world" ignores the fact that it operates as a state within the context of a greater national whole, rather than as an independent nation on the international scene.
 
Source: Los Angeles Times

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