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California’s Water Crisis Isn’t a Drought—It’s Bad Policy

by March 23, 2026
by March 23, 2026

In late December, winter storms brought rain and snow that modestly improved California’s reservoirs and snowpack. Officials quickly cautioned, however, that this would not solve the water crisis. The message was clear: despite years of restrictions and emergency measures, policymakers still have no path to long-term water security.

California’s water shortages are routinely attributed to drought, climate change, and population growth, while residents are urged to ration water, shorten showers, and accept fines as a civic responsibility. Yet household behavior does not drive scarcity. California’s water shortage is essentially the product of government policy—decades of price suppression, subsidizing waste, and allocating water according to political rules rather than economic value.  

Until water is treated as the scarce resource it is—correctly priced and efficiently allocated—no amount of rain or restrictions will fix a crisis of the state’s own making.

Who Really Bears the Cost of Water Shortages

California’s response to water scarcity has followed a familiar and deeply misguided script.  State authorities repeatedly impose water-use restrictions that disproportionately burden ordinary citizens: limits on car washing, bans on filling swimming pools, mandatory reductions in household water use, surveillance of domestic consumption, and steep fines for exceeding arbitrarily defined thresholds.

What began as emergency measures has since become permanent policy for urban residents in 2025. Yet this approach functions mainly as a political distraction. 

Even if every Californian rationed water perfectly, the impact would be minimal: urban users consume only about 10 percent of the state’s water, according to the PPIC. The bulk goes to agriculture—largely wealthy, politically connected farmers—who use 80 percent while producing just 2 percent of economic output, largely shielded from restrictions and sustained by heavy subsidies.

This misallocation is reinforced by a price system that bears little resemblance to scarcity or cost. Across the Colorado River Basin, a significant source of California’s water, nearly a quarter of irrigation supplies are priced at zero or near zero. Water delivered through federal projects averages just $0.12 per acre-foot, compared with $853 per acre-foot from non-federal sources. Agricultural water districts pay about $30 per acre-foot, while municipal utilities pay approximately $512 for the same water. Households in coastal California cities, meanwhile, often face effective costs of $2,500 to $4,700 per acre-foot. In this system, those least responsible for scarcity pay the highest price for it.

“We can’t address the growing water scarcity in the West while we continue to give that water away for free or close to it. Without action, we risk depleting this essential resource beyond recovery,” said Noah Garrison, a water researcher at UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability. 

Such pricing inevitably shapes how water is used. Artificially cheap water has reshaped agriculture in ways that defy both climate and common sense. It has made it profitable to cultivate highly water-intensive crops—alfalfa, rice, cotton, almonds, and pecans—in arid regions that receive less than 12 inches of precipitation per year, where such cultivation would be uneconomic under market prices. Research by scholars at the University of Chicago confirms this dynamic: when irrigation is subsidized, farmers are more likely to devote land to water-intensive crops. 

These policies are routinely justified in the name of food security and employment, but they obscure a basic economic reality: water-intensive production in arid regions persists because water is subsidized, not because it reflects comparative advantage—and it locks California into a path of chronic scarcity. If this model continues, the consequences will be severe: worsening water shortages, rising food prices, and growing vulnerability for households and communities.

When water is priced as if abundant, producers have little incentive to conserve or switch to less water-intensive crops. Research in Nature shows such a shift could cut water use by up to 93 percent—though profits would fall. Yet policies that shield producers from scarcity keep those savings out of reach, leaving households to pay.

Price Water Properly

California’s water crisis is a governance failure, not a natural phenomenon. As Amartya Sen famously observed, famines are rarely caused by absolute shortages but by institutional failure—and water scarcity follows the same logic. The problem in California is therefore not drought or rainfall, but the rules and incentives that govern water use. Decades of subsidies and distorted incentives have produced deep malinvestment—farms, cities, and industries built on the assumption of abundant, underpriced water. 

In functioning markets, scarcity is signaled by prices. As a resource becomes scarce, higher prices discourage waste and encourage conservation, innovation, and investment. California’s water crisis persists because this mechanism has been suppressed. When prices reflect the full cost of water, low-value uses naturally decline, and conservation becomes voluntary rather than enforced. With competitive pricing, droughts would lead to price adjustments, more efficient use, and incentives to expand viable supply.

Price reform alone, however, is not enough without exchange. Although California nominally allows water trading, markets remain tightly constrained by regulatory barriers, approval delays, and rigid water-rights doctrines such as “use-it-or-lose-it” rules. These restrictions reward consumption over conservation and prevent water saved by one user from being sold to another who values it more. In a genuine market, conservation would not require mandates or moral appeals; it would be rewarded through voluntary exchange, allowing water to flow from lower-value to higher-value uses guided by prices rather than bureaucracy.

As Ellen Hanak, director of the PPIC Water Policy Center, notes, “by compensating those with long-standing water rights for moving water to activities and places where the lack of water will be more costly, trading encourages cooperation in the sustainable management of this vital resource.” Yet existing rules often prevent such mutually beneficial exchanges.

A sustainable transition, therefore, requires confronting reality head-on. Some water-intensive agriculture activities will have to contract—or disappear altogether. California should phase out water subsidies, allow prices to reflect scarcity, remove barriers to water trading, and embrace free trade in water-intensive food products. Letting comparative advantage guide production would reduce pressure on scarce resources, lower long-term costs, and improve resilience.

This view is widely shared among economists. A large majority of the IGM Economic Experts Panel agrees that Californians would be better off if all final users paid a uniform price for water, adjusted for quality, location, and time—even if some food prices rose and some farms failed. As Harvard economist Oliver Hart noted, “equal prices ensure efficiency; consumer rationing does not.”

Preserving politically protected water uses through subsidies does not create stability. It deepens misallocation, speeds depletion, and guarantees future shortages will be more frequent, severe, and complex.

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