The total population of the eight counties comprising the San Joaquin Valley at the time of the 2011–2015 American Community Survey 5-year Estimates by United States Census Bureau reported a population of 4,080,509. The racial composition of San Joaquin Valley was 1,428,978 (35.0%) Non-Hispanic White, 2,048,280 (50.2%) Hispanic or Latino, 310,557 (7.6%) Asian, 193,694 (4.7%) Black or African American, 40,911 (1.0%) American Indian and Alaska Native, and 13,000 (0.32%) Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander. The median income for a household in the valley was $46,713. In 2011
Forbes, after taking the fluctuation of median home values, five of the top twenty "most miserable cities" were located in the San Joaquin Valley. Aside from the collapse of median home values, persistent crime, unemployment and poverty were common factors between
Bakersfield,
Fresno,
Merced,
Modesto and
Stockton – every major city of the San Joaquin Valley.
Medical access Insufficient access to medicine in the United States, in particular prenatal and preventive care, is typified by both rural and inner city communities. Early and adequate access to prenatal care is important to maternal and child health and is another comparative indicator of community health. According to the California Department of Health Services, 37% of births in
Merced County occurred with no or late prenatal care and the San Joaquin Valley average was 19.5% of births with no or late prenatal care. By comparison, the California average was 13.6% of births and the national average was 10% of births Likewise, the counties of the San Joaquin Valley have relatively high ratios of population to physicians, suggesting relatively low access, with the highest in
Kings County at 1,027 patients per a physician, the San Joaquin Valley average at approximately 671 patients per a physician and the California average of 400 patients per a physician. Another measure of access is licensed acute care hospital beds per thousand population, where the Kings County average of 1.1 beds per a thousand and the San Joaquin Valley average of 1.8 beds per a thousand were again less than the state average of 2.1 bed per a thousand.
Ethnic and cultural groups Latinos/Hispanics, Chicanos and Mexicans at a
United Farmworkers rally, 1974|thumb|upright Currently, the Latino and Mexican descendants are a large percentage of the demographics in the San Joaquin Valley. Since not long after the onset of the
bracero program during
World War II, all but a minor percentage of the farmworkers in the region have been of Mexican ancestry. Ethnic and economic friction between Mexican-Americans and the valley's predominantly white farming elite manifested itself most notably during the 1960s and 1970s, when the
United Farm Workers, led by
César Chávez, went on numerous
strikes and called for boycotts of table grapes. The UFW generated enormous sympathy throughout the United States, even managing to terminate several agricultural mechanization projects at the
United States Department of Agriculture. Consequently, from the 1970s onward, landlords and large corporations have hired
undocumented immigrants. This has allowed them to increase their profits due to low overhead on wages.
European groups The San Joaquin Valley has—by California standards—an unusually large number of European, Middle Eastern, and Asian ethnicities in the heritage of its citizens. These communities are often quite large and, relative to Americans immigration patterns, quite eclectic: for example, there are more
Azorean Portuguese in the San Joaquin Valley than in the Azores. Many groups are found in majorities in specific cities, and hardly anywhere else in the region. For example,
Assyrians are concentrated in
Turlock,
Dutch in
Ripon, and
Croats in
Delano.
Kingsburg is famous for its distinctly
Swedish air, having been founded by immigrants from that country. Ethnic groups found in a broader area are
Portuguese,
Germans,
Armenians,
Basques, and the "
Okies" of primarily
English and
Scots-Irish descent who migrated to California from the
Midwest and
South.
Molokan Russians settled in
Fresno,
Kerman, and
Madera as well as other Russian settled in Fresno.
Mennonite groups descended from
Russian Germans settled in the areas of
Reedley and
Dinuba, as well as Lutheran and Catholic
Volga Germans who settled in the broader
Fresno area.
Asian Americans The San Joaquin Valley has a large and exceptionally diverse Asian American population; primarily from the regions of Punjab in India and Pakistan, the Philippines, and Southeast Asia, especially Laos and Cambodia. Punjabi Sikh Americans have immigrated to the San Joaquin Valley since the early 1900s and 1910s, and remain a very large presence in the area. To this day,
Punjabi is the third most spoken language in the San Joaquin Valley region, after English and Spanish, and the first Sikh Gurdwara was founded in Stockton in 1915. Following abolition of immigration restrictions from Asia in the 1960s and 1970s, large numbers of Pakistanis and Indians from Punjab, Gujarat, and Southern India have settled in these valley communities including
Modesto,
Livingston,
Fresno,
Stockton, and
Lodi. In addition, the late 1970s and '80s saw an influx of immigrants from
Indochina following the
War in Vietnam. These immigrants, the majority of whom are
Hmong,
Laotian,
Cambodian, and
Vietnamese, have largely settled in the communities of Stockton, Modesto,
Merced, and
Fresno. Hmongs, Laotians, and Cambodians are the largest communities of Southeast Asians in the San Joaquin Valley, and the valley has some of the largest populations of these groups in the nation. Fresno has the second-largest Hmong population of any American metropolitan area after
Minneapolis–Saint Paul, and Stockton is believed to have the largest percentage of Cambodian Americans of any major American metropolitan area.
Merced, Modesto, Fresno,
Visalia, and Stockton have some of the largest populations of Laotian Americans in the United States. The
Filipino American population is concentrated in Delano and
Lathrop. Filipinos have a strong history in Stockton. Filipino organizations in Stockton are reflected in various commercial buildings identified as Filipino. Filipinos fought for the U.S. against Japan in WWII, in exchange for favorable immigration status. Stockton has been an adjunct to the San Francisco Bay Area, which was a major military production and transit area during WWII. Filipino emigration to Stockton followed.
African Americans Colonel Allensworth State Historic Park marks the location of the only California town to be founded, financed and governed by African Americans. The small farming community was founded in 1908 by Lt. Colonel
Allen Allensworth, Professor William Payne, William Peck, a minister, John W. Palmer, a miner, and Harry A. Mitchell, a real estate agent, dedicated to improving the economic and social status of African Americans. Uncontrollable circumstances, including a drop in the area's water table, resulted in the town's demise.
Okies and Arkies The
Depression-era migrants to the San Joaquin Valley from the South and Midwest are one of the more well-known groups in the Central Valley, in large part due to the popularity of
John Steinbeck's novel
The Grapes of Wrath and the
Henry Fonda movie made from it. By 1910, agriculture in the southern
Great Plains had become nearly unviable due to soil erosion and poor rainfall. Much of the rural population of states such as
Kansas,
Texas,
Oklahoma, and
Arkansas left at this time, selling their land and moving to
Chicago,
Kansas City,
Detroit,
Denver,
Phoenix,
Las Vegas and fast-growing
Los Angeles. Those who remained experienced continuing deterioration of conditions, which reached their nadir during the drought that began in the late 1920s and created the infamous
Dust Bowl. (Small cotton farmers, many of them Black, in states such as
Mississippi and
Alabama suffered similar problems from the first major infestation of the
boll weevil.) When the onset of the Great Depression created a national banking crisis, family farmers—usually heavily in debt—often had their mortgages foreclosed by banks desperate to shore up their balance sheets. In response, many farmers loaded their families and portable possessions into their automobiles and drove west. Many of the Okies and Arkies left the San Joaquin Valley during World War II, most of them going to Los Angeles, San Francisco and
San Diego to work in war-related industries. Many of those who stayed ended up in
Bakersfield and
Oildale, as the southern San Joaquin Valley became an important area of oil production after major Southern California oil fields such as
Signal Hill began to dry up.
Country music legends
Buck Owens (from Texas) and
Merle Haggard came out of Bakersfield's
honky-tonk scene and created
a hard-driving sound that is still deeply associated with the city. ==Economy==