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How the Crash Will Reshape America

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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-15-09 01:43 PM
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How the Crash Will Reshape America

The crash of 2008 continues to reverberate loudly nationwide—destroying jobs, bankrupting businesses, and displacing homeowners. But already, it has damaged some places much more severely than others. On the other side of the crisis, America’s economic landscape will look very different than it does today. What fate will the coming years hold for New York, Charlotte, Detroit, Las Vegas? Will the suburbs be ineffably changed? Which cities and regions can come back strong? And which will never come back at all?

by Richard Florida

My father was a child of the Great Depression. Born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1921 to Italian immigrant parents, he experienced the economic crisis head-on. He took a job working in an eyeglass factory in the city’s Ironbound section in 1934, at age 13, combining his wages with those of his father, mother, and six siblings to make a single-family income. When I was growing up, he spoke often of his memories of breadlines, tent cities, and government-issued clothing. At Christmas, he would tell my brother and me how his parents, unable to afford new toys, had wrapped the same toy steam shovel, year after year, and placed it for him under the tree. In my extended family, my uncles occupied a pecking order based on who had grown up in the roughest economic circumstances. My Uncle Walter, who went on to earn a master’s degree in chemical engineering and eventually became a senior executive at Colgate-Palmolive, came out on top—not because of his academic or career achievements, but because he grew up with the hardest lot.

My father’s experiences were broadly shared throughout the country. Although times were perhaps worst in the declining rural areas of the Dust Bowl, every region suffered, and the residents of small towns and big cities alike breathed in the same uncertainty and distress. The Great Depression was a national crisis—and in many ways a nationalizing event. The entire country, it seemed, tuned in to President Roosevelt’s fireside chats.

The current economic crisis is unlikely to result in the same kind of shared experience. To be sure, the economic contraction is causing pain just about everywhere. In October, less than a month after the financial markets began to melt down, Moody’s Investor Services published an assessment of recent economic activity within 381 U.S. metropolitan areas. Three hundred and two were already in deep recession, and 64 more were at risk. Only 15 areas were still expanding. Notable among them were the oil- and natural-resource-rich regions of Texas and Oklahoma, buoyed by energy prices that have since fallen; and the Greater Washington, D.C., region, where government bailouts, the nationalization of financial companies, and fiscal expansion are creating work for lawyers, lobbyists, political scientists, and government contractors.

No place in the United States is likely to escape a long and deep recession. Nonetheless, as the crisis continues to spread outward from New York, through industrial centers like Detroit, and into the Sun Belt, it will undoubtedly settle much more heavily on some places than on others. Some cities and regions will eventually spring back stronger than before. Others may never come back at all. As the crisis deepens, it will permanently and profoundly alter the country’s economic landscape. I believe it marks the end of a chapter in American economic history, and indeed, the end of a whole way of life.


Global Crises and Economic Transformation

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/print/200903/meltdown-geography
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BlooInBloo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-15-09 01:54 PM
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1. That was an interesting article....
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DemReadingDU Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-16-09 01:36 PM
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2. This is a better forum
Edited on Mon Feb-16-09 01:40 PM by DemReadingDU
Thanks for posting in Economy

Edit: I believe there will be some kind of crash. It will be a long road to recovery, whatever that is. It will be different than what we have today, not necessarily bad though. I think people will have closer families and a better feeling of community, everybody working and sharing together.

:shrug:
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Danascot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-16-09 01:38 PM
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3. Long but highly informative article
Worth taking the time to read.

K&R and thanks for posting.
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ozymandius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-16-09 03:53 PM
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4. Kicking
But too late to recommend. Alas!
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Bigmack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-16-09 05:18 PM
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5. Interesting article - well worth
the read, but it seems to me that he largely ignores a couple of elephants in the "economic room" - global climate change and looming resource depletions. Ms Bigmack
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SocialRealist Donating Member (12 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-17-09 09:29 PM
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6. Informative read. Now, how will the crash reshape me?
Financially, that is.

If there are widespread bank failures, would my debts to them (mortgage, car, credit cards) simply vanish? Would I be off the hook for my debts? Or would they be bought by the government or perhaps foreign banks?

I can't see the surviving banks having the power to purchase all the consumer debt that was held by the failing banks. Especially since people will be pulling their money out of banks like crazy.
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FieldsBlank Donating Member (52 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-18-09 09:04 AM
Response to Original message
7. interesting bear chart
hopefully the chart shows up
if not, check out the link
historical bears

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