You can download the 2020 Silicon Valley Index over here.
Below are a few items that stood out for me:
- We have had nine continuous years of expansion since the last recession, adding 821,000 jobs in the Bay Area.
- Over that same time period, we only permitted 173,000 new homes and have 100,000 megacommuters [Josh: hopefully the option to work remotely continues for many post-COVID].
- Labor productivity reached a record $241,000 per worker, a 53% increase from 2001.
- Unemployment hit 2.1%, a 19-year low.
- More people are leaving the region than coming in.
- Home prices declined 6% in 2019, yet median home sale prices are still the highest in the country (over $1 million).
- Income inequality hit a historic high with 13% of households holding 75% of the region's wealth.
- Internet speeds are slow compared to SF, California, and the country as a whole [Josh: this is shocking for living in the middle of Silicon Valley].
- Individual median income is $117,000 and 82% of the population is above 150% of the poverty level.
- Silicon Valley's ethnic breakdown is 35% Asian, 33% White, 25% Hispanic/Latino, 5% Multiple/Other, and 2% Black/African American.
- 24% of Silicon Valley residents have Graduate or Professional Degrees.
- 51% of families speak a language other than English at home (vs. 41% for SF, 45% for California, and 22% for the US).
- The Bay Area has by far the largest number of tech jobs and greatest % of people employed in tech out of any region in the US.
- 9% of Silicon Valley Residents lack access to adequate food and nutrition
- San Jose generates more patents than any other city in California (11% of all CA patents in fact).
- In 2019, traffic delays cost as much as $3.4 billion in lost productivity for Silicon Valley workers.
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