Archive for October, 2008

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Thu Oct 16th 2008 at 10:08am UTC

Falling…

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

Housing prices still have a long way to go before they hit bottom, when you look at metrics like the ratio of home prices to rents according to this report (and graph) in the New York Times.

One reliable proxy of housing values — the ratio of home prices to rents — indicates that in many cities prices are still too high relative to historical norms. In Miami, for instance, home prices are about 22 times annual rents, according to analysis by Moody’s Economy.com. The average figure for the last 20 years is just 15 times annual rents. The difference between those two numbers suggests that a home valued at $500,000 today might be worth only $341,000 based on the long-term relationship between prices and rents. The price-to-rent ratio, which provides one measure of how much of a premium home buyers place on owning rather than renting, spiked across the country earlier this decade.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Thu Oct 16th 2008 at 9:02am UTC

Out of the Crisis

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

Matt Roush summarizes my talk at Detroit’s Creative Cities Summit 2.0 earlier this week:

Florida said the market and economic turmoil today is a “fundamental business shift, two or three or four 80-year waves packed into one. This is a massive realignment of how our society is organized.”

Saying today’s market chaos is reminiscent of the chaos of the 1870s that gave rise to Karl Marx, Florida said that “the economics of financial capital at its end. The era of making billions by trading alone is over. When credit’s hard to get, when people can’t move billions around easily, there’s only one source of capital left, the kind that comes in human beings, in real people, in our communities.”

The core of this transformation, Florida said, is that “for the first time in human history, no longer does the ability to capture natural resources or raw materials, and combine them with physical labor and giant masses of capital, those things are no longer the cornerstone of economic growth. All those things can now be moved around. In the advanced world, the only source of economic growth is human creativity.”

And Florida said he believes bankers and government officials simply haven’t grasped the changes yet. “With all due respect to (U.S. Treasury) Secretary Paulson and the G7, their models are bankrupt. The new models are not in the White House or the parliaments of Europe, they are strategies being conducted on the ground in real communities.”

The rest is here.

I’m working on an essay on the Geographic Implications of the Financial Crisis for a major monthly magazine. I’d appreciate your thoughts, fact, and insights?

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Thu Oct 16th 2008 at 8:42am UTC

The New Frugality

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

It’s the cover of the new issue of Business Week. Martin Kenney wrote about it here more than a month ago.

Martin Kenney
by Martin Kenney
Wed Oct 15th 2008 at 7:06pm UTC

The Nature of This Crisis Matters

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

This Monday, the world’s governments took a final plunge on fixing this crisis by basically assuming the debts of the world’s important banks. In the U.S., the politics of who receives the bailout and who doesn’t will be interesting. In my mind this gamble poses two questions:

1)  Will it be enough to prevent a collapse of the financial system?

This is a difficult question to answer.  I have my doubts.

If this extreme program operates as many think it might, it would guarantee that a certain set of banks would not collapse. The reasoning seems to be that these guarantees will unfreeze credit markets. For this the governments of the world will take hundreds of billions of bad bank loans, default swaps, structured investment vehicles, and all manner of so-called assets (probably worth zero or close to zero) onto their books. The sheer scale of what is being proposed can be seen by the aftermath of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy. We now know it had worthless loans and assets of, at least, $100 billion. Some Europeans are saying that Lehman’s collapse cost them about $300 billion. We also know that almost always in such bankruptcies the true cost is greater than what is initially reported. Let us extrapolate from this and assume (because to take on all of them would be unimaginable) that when the Treasury/Fed say they will bail out banks, they only mean a few key banks and leave the rest to their own devices (there is evidence for this suspicion as the large regional banks such as Sun Trust and Zion did not participate in the huge rally on Monday). So, which banks will be bailed out? My guess is Goldman Sachs (Paulson and Robert Rubin’s ex-employer), Citi, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and a few others (did Wells Fargo buy Wachovia so that it could enter this charmed circle?).  P.S. – We now have confirmation of which firms are being bailed out: JPMorgan, Goldman, Citi, BoA, Wells Fargo, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, State Street Bank [thank you Barney Frank], Bank of NY Mellon [thank you Hillary and Schumer].

Will this unfreeze credit markets? I think it is unlikely for two reasons: One, if you are an unprotected bank, then why would you lend at all? If you are one of the protected, then banks why on earth would you lend to any organization outside the circle of protected banks? The assumption appears to be that the actors in the system will now assume everything is fine and begin lending. If as everyone expects a recession is coming and most firms are highly leveraged, lending would be very risky. What type of collateral for a loan could you receive that would be worth as much in a bankruptcy tomorrow. Of course, one could have loans or investments a la Warren Buffett in Goldman Sachs or GE, which charge nearly usurious penalty interest rates of 10 percent and radically dilute the common stock holder, i.e., our pension funds and 401Ks.

The world’s governments have taken what appears to be a final step by assuming on the debt of their largest and privileged banks, they are committing future taxpayers to valorize today’s debt. They are not yet willing to admit openly that the taxpayers are buying garbage and moving it from the banks to themselves. Governments appear to hope that by moving some portion of the garbage to the taxpayer the problems will go away. This is similar to the belief among Bear Stearns, Lehman, and AIG executives that hiding garbage debt inside their firms and then lying about it to the public would make the garbage disappear.

So will this newest plan unfreeze credit markets and encourage banks to loan again? Unlikely, but no one has a crystal ball.

2) The second question is this: Is the financial system telling us something far more profound about the underlying economic situation?

Why is this the most important question? If this is a profound crisis in the core of the economic system, then these approaches are merely treating symptoms and are destined to fail (sort of like treating metastasized cancer by surgically removing parts of the body). Remember, Ben Bernanke has been called the “foremost expert on the Great Depression” by his fellow mainstream economists. Bernanke essentially lays the problems of the Great Depression on bad financial policy by the Federal Reserve and other fiscal and monetary mistakes. This belief says that government fiscal and monetary policies, if well administered, can circumvent capitalist economic crises. Marxists and Schumpeterians are not so sanguine. Particularly Marxists argue that the Great Depression was the expression of fundamental discontinuities in the underlying economy and, if this is the case, then attempts to patch the current system up are bound to fail – and probably in the process waste resources and time.

Let me play out the reasons that we may be in a more profound crisis and, if this the case, why the current ever more panicked efforts by governments to swallow private sector debts cannot provide a basis for a sustainable recovery.

a) The forces of globalization are still underway and, as many of have been saying, they are putting downward pressure on incomes in the developed nations, which, of course, are the consumers of the products of the developing nations. A small telltale of this, IBM announced dramatically increased profits on only slightly higher sales. My guess is that these profits were made by substituting low-cost developing world service providers for their high-cost developing nation employees. This dynamic will continue putting pressure on wages in the developed nations and contributing to a deflationary dynamic.

b) Real wages have stagnated in the U.S. since 2000 for all but the wealthy.

c) Income inequality has increased globally and, as a result, the vast majority find themselves less and less capable to consume.

d) The technological revolution of digitization has changed the central source of value creation from the assembly line to the designer/engineer.

e) The entire credit complex that was built up after World War II that Vance Packard decried and the cult classic The Hidden Persuaders may be at its endpoint. This would mean a deleveraging on a scale never before seen in human history. Is it possible that we can no longer borrow from the future because the future is now?

If our situation is, as I suspect, more profound, then the newest bailout will fail, and this will be clear soon.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Wed Oct 15th 2008 at 1:04pm UTC

Florida on Florida

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

So-Flo, which stretches from Miami to Orlando, west to Tampa, and along two northern offshoots to Gainesville and up the Atlantic coast to Jacksonville, is the seventh-largest mega-region in North America and the 15th-largest in the world, home to 15 million people and $430 billion in economic activity each year. Click here for more.

David Miller
by David Miller
Wed Oct 15th 2008 at 9:46am UTC

Russell Simmons Gets Spiky

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Entrepreneur Russell Simmons understands the spiky nature of the creative economy and has launched a new creative industries “bplan like” contest called the The Race to Be: The Creative Entrepreneurship Contest. The event is the centerpiece of this year’s Global Entrepreneurship Week (Nov. 17- Nov. 23).

The contest has three categories: film, fashion, and music. Applications can be submitted online and the finals of each category will take place on-site in spikes of industry/artistic excellence: film in LA, music in Austin, and fashion in NY. From the contest website:

The competition targets 18 to 29 year olds interested in film, music and fashion who want to become young entrepreneurs. From Oct. 2 through Oct. 31, applicants may apply online at www.racetobeusa.com and submit a sample of an existing creative work to compete.

• Five finalists from each category will be selected from the online submissions and will bring their portfolio of completed creative work to the event where they will compete in an onsite challenge. Each genre’s competition will be held in its respective artistic center:

oFilm – BE. The Story on November 17, Sony Pictures Studios, Los Angeles
oMusic – BE. The Sound on November 19, Austin, Venue TBD
oFashion – BE. The Style on November 21, New York Stock Exchange, New York

At each event, a panel of industry experts will serve as mentors and conduct a workshop focused on the importance of creativity, innovation and entrepreneurship in today’s business world. Each finalist will be paired with a mentor who will work with the individual to create an entrepreneurial concept and develop a marketing pitch for their work.

• At the end of the day, each finalist will present his or her work and make a “pitch” to the panel of judges. The judges will score each presentation in four categories: creative content, business viability, marketability, and the “it” factor.

• The winner of each competition will receive $5,000, a mentoring opportunity, possible internship and post-event PR exposure for their winning concept.

I have been researching business plan competitions for four years now and it’s amazing how the model has evolved and moved way beyond the campus.

This competition speaks directly to the creative economy and the creative class and while its cash prize doesn’t distinguish it, Russell Simmons, the categories and format, and the opportunities to network make it a special case. It also, obviously, underscores the great concentrations of talent that exist.

Check out the application (deadline is Oct. 31) and share your great ideas or works in progress with Russell Simmons and the world during Global Entrepreneurship Week. Good luck!

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Tue Oct 14th 2008 at 5:24pm UTC

Globalization of Innovation

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

In the wake of financial turmoil, the globalization of research goes on. IBM is set to open a major new research center in China, while Microsoft plans three new research centers in Britain, France, and Germany. The global serach for talent continues. My hunch is that the combination of financial and economic instability plus immigration restrictions will make the U.S. a slightly less attractive or viable location for global talent. Even though the effect is likely to be modest, companies will continue to redeploy where the talent is or wants to be.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Tue Oct 14th 2008 at 5:24pm UTC

Creative and Affordable

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

I’m in Detroit for the fantastic Creative Cities Summit taking place over the next few days. Detroit is the center of modern musical innovation giving rise to genre upon genre from the proto-punk of the MC5 and The Stooges, to Motown, techno, and, of course, Kid Rock, Eminem, and The White Stripes among so many others.

It is now one of the most affordable cities around. According to this story in the local paper, the median price for a house or condo sold in Detroit in September 2008 was less than $10,000 ($9,250). In affluent Oakland County, which boasted some of the most expensive real estate in the world when I was a boy, the median price is $132,000. That could be turned into a powerful lure in this era of financial turmoil, authenticity, and frugality.

Zoltan Acs
by Zoltan Acs
Mon Oct 13th 2008 at 3:48pm UTC

Krugman

Monday, October 13th, 2008

This is a great day for geography. Krugman’s Prize is a real vindication that geography is important and that the profession also thinks so. Richard still remembers when we met in Ottowa in 1989, almost 20 years ago, to lay out some of the work on cities. For those of us that have contributued to this version of our work, Richard Florida, Maryann Feldman, David Audretsch, Attila Varga, Sam Youl Lee, Catherine Armington, among others, we are all indebted to Paul for his pathbreaking work in this area. Thank you.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Mon Oct 13th 2008 at 9:52am UTC

Happy Turkey Day

Monday, October 13th, 2008

It’s Thanksgiving in Canada. Two years in a row we’ve had near record heat in Toronto with temperatures expected in the high 70s. Here’s a nice Thanksgiving gift. This video had me howling in light of continuing debates over funding those “elitist” and “cosmopolitan” arts. Not to miss – the “toasts” at the end.