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Explore the changing urban political economy of the USA, from the shift from industrial to post-industrial economy to the impact of globalization on US cities. Delve into the paradoxes of inequality, the rise of the urban underclass, and strategies for urban economic development, including gentrification and incentivizing business growth.
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CHANGING ECONOMIC CLIMATE OF URBAN AMERICA • Shift from industrial to post-industrial economy • Industrial based economy predominated until early 1980’s • Shift to service/high-tech economy • Manunfacturing still important – but: • Sunrise industries • Sunset industries
Where are Jobs being lost ? • Job loss occurring in the northern industrial (Rust) belt • Stretches from Hudson River to Mississippi River • Job loss also occurring in central city
Where are the new jobs being created? • Population shift to Southern tier • Rise of the Sun Belt cities • Atlanta • Houston • Los Angeles
Globalization and the Rise of Global City • Globalization • Industry • Finance • Globalization of United States cities • Cities now divided into tiers based on role in global economy • First tier (London, New York, Tokyo) • Second tier (Chicago, Los Angeles, Paris, Zurich, Brussels, Singapore, Washington D.C.
Interconnectedness • Key point: virtually all U.S. cities are linked in one fashion or another to global economy
Impact of Globalization on U.S. Cities • Positive: • greater variety of imported goods and services • American exports open to larger world markets • Cities housing export-oriented companies grow
Impact of Globalization on U.S. Cities • Negative • Many communities/companies poorly prepared to compete • Difficulties competing with cheap labor overseas
Paradox: Inequality/Poverty • Greater Inequality • Middle class shrinking • Between 1967 & 1998 middle-class share of income in the United States declined from 52% to 47%
Paradox: Inequality/Poverty • Less Poverty • 1990’s reduced poverty to 11.3% • African-Americans and Hispanics remain disproportionately “in poverty” (21%) Working class neighborhood Los Angeles
CHANGING NATIONAL ECONOMY: Impact on the CITY as a Place of Opportunity • Trends of 1980’s/1990’s have diminished ability of cities to perform historical roles as places of opportunity for the poor • Jobs migrated from inner city to suburbs • Jobs migrated to South • Jobs migrated overseas
Especially in Northeast and Mid-West • Inner-city ghettos have become holding pens for a desperate urban underclass
The New Underclass • Most adults in inner-city ghettos do not work • Structural explanation – work has disappeared • Lack of opportunities has intensified drug problems • Ghetto neighborhoods are spreading
The BIPOLAR CITY • Underclass and immigrants don’t have skills needed for advanced technical economy • Small elite of upper-income professionals work in high-rise downtown office buildings
Is an Urban Renaissance in the Making ? Gentrification: San Francisco Consumer Oriented Projects - Inner Harbor Baltimore
URBAN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES I. • Redesign of urban landscape • Many buildings in central city boarded up/abandoned with migration to suburbs • Redeveloping these areas is the challenge – but is the cost too great? Detroit: Urban Decay persists
URBAN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES II. • Cities engage in economic development plans • Economic incentives to attract businesses • Competition among cities fierce
INCENTIVES FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT • Urban Enterprise zones • Taxes and government regulations reduced in blighted neighborhoods • Financial incentives • Forgiving property taxes • Industrial Development Revenue Bonds help companies raise money at lower cost • Venture capital • State investment in promising start-up ventures
When all is said and done • business are attracted to states and cities with low average wages, weak unions and low unemployment and worker compensation benefits
CHANGE AND BIAS IN THE URBAN POLITICAL ECONOMY • Major changein urban political economy is solidification of the central-city mayor’s role as a promoter of public private partnership that seeks to: • Increase economic activity in urban areas • Improve city’s fiscal base
Consequences of biases that permeate new urban political economy • Urban redevelopment projects have had a bias toward the middle class and private sector • Redevelopment tools seldom used to help the poor • San Diego Inner Harbor
Dilemmas for Urban Governments as they Seek to Raise Revenue • Cities that raise too much money for redistributive services for needy residents will drive middle class residents to less redistributive oriented suburbs • Should mayors and city councils leave redistributive activity to the federal government and the states?