Posts Tagged ‘The Atlantic’

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Mon May 25th 2009 at 2:00pm EDT

People and Places

Monday, May 25th, 2009

The Next American City’s Josh Leon reacts to my March Atlantic essay on cities and the crisis:

[N]ot everyone can afford to move and the poorest are left behind amidst urban blight and neglect. What do we do about the immobile? What do we do with cities that are net losers of the “creative class”? For this so-called creative brand of capitalism, the uncreative are someone else’s problem …There is an inherent inhumanity in leaving people and their cities in the dust. Besides, the cost of finding ways to get so-called obsolete classes of workers gainfully employed where they live is looking preferable to the social costs of managing huge ghost cities and permanent spatial inequality.

All sentiments I share. The first step – and the main point of my essay – is to elevate the issue of growing geographic inequality and bring it into the ongoing conversation about the crisis and recovery.

But what can be done? How to create whole new industries and jobs in declining places? Protecting old industries or baling out uncompetitive firms – two preferred solutions – make little economic sense. So what’s left?

We can confer subsidies on places to improve their infrastructure, universities, and core institutions, or quality of life. But this still is unlikely to stem the tide of the talented and the mobile, at least in the short-run. We can take a longer-term approach and help them gradually shift away from declining industries and build around their remaining assets organically and over time.

At the end of the day, people – not industries or even places – should be our biggest concern. We can best help those who are hardest-hit by the crisis, by providing a generous social safety, investing in their skills, and when necessary helping them become mobile and move to where the opportunities are.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Mon May 4th 2009 at 8:19am EDT

The Atlantic Blog

Monday, May 4th, 2009

New Atantic blog correspondents’ site is up. My post on “Mega-Regions and High-Speed Rail” is here. Stay tuned for more.

CCE Editor
by CCE Editor
Wed Apr 1st 2009 at 5:20pm EDT

“To the Point” Interview on NPR

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Listen in to hear Richard Florida interviewed on Lawrence O’Donnell’s To the Point on NPR last Friday. Some details about the appearance:

From Detroit to LA, the Recession Reshapes America

With Detroit home prices at record lows, is this the end of a great American city or its best chance for a revival? How will the crash reshape America? That is the title question of Richard Florida’s piece in the Atlantic this month.

Tell us, what are your thoughts on Detroit?

CCE Editor
by CCE Editor
Mon Mar 2nd 2009 at 9:07am EST

Interview on BBC World News America

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

On February 25, Richard Florida appeared on BBC World News America, BBC America in the U.S., and BBC World simultaneously around the world. Tied to his recent piece in The Atlantic, this interview looks at the subjects of job loss and creation as well as gender equality.

Your thoughts?

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Wed Feb 18th 2009 at 11:07am EST

How the Crisis Will Reshape Toronto

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

My recent The Atlantic article and multiple covers, including one on my adopted hometown, pose the obvious question: What about Toronto?

Prompting me on this are stories at Torontoist and The Toronto Star. I recently had a nice dialogue on the same with David Olive as he reports, along with nice quotes from Fareed Zakaria who visited recently, in his Star column today:

Looking further ahead, Richard Florida, the urban economics guru, sees Toronto angling for the same global heft as Chicago and Tokyo. “I sense we are in great shape to move up in the global ranks,” says Florida, now based at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management. Florida followed the example of his mentor, the late urbanologist Jane Jacobs, in relocating two years ago to Canada from his native U.S.

Like New York and London, Toronto is a finance, media and entertainment centre, forecast to be among the fastest-growing business sectors over the next generation. Unlike those cities, Toronto also has an abundance of technological research, and more social stability and ethnic diversity. And in recent years the city’s cultural amenities have expanded considerably.

Florida readily concedes that stubborn problems like income inequality and a deteriorating basic-industry sector have yet to be tackled. But in a cover-story essay in the current Atlantic magazine, the venerable U.S. public issues journal, Florida identifies Toronto among fast-growing “mega-regions” most ideally suited to rapid growth. Atlantic gave Florida’s article four covers, showing the skylines of North American cities with the best prospects for sustained prosperity – Toronto, New York, Chicago and San Francisco.

Yet Florida discourages U.S. comparisons. “Stop looking south for models,” says Florida, based for 17 years at Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Mellon University. “They ain’t there. The U.S. is in very deep crisis. It’s time for Toronto to break out and lead.”

The Atlantic piece was concerned with the situation in the States, especially New York, which has been hard hit by the financial crisis.

That said, I’ve been thinking a great deal in my work at the MPI about the opportunity space opened for Toronto, Ontario and Canada as a whole.

Crises are key times for nations and especially for cities and regions. They are the times when changes of position become likely and when nations, and in particular cities and mega-regions, can make their move.  My sense is that Canada as a whole and Toronto and its mega-region are as well-positioned as any place in the world to prosper and improve their relative positions in this transformative period.

First off, Canada has a substantial advantage in its stable banking system. Toronto is the center of that system. At the YPO event with Zakaria, Frank McKenna from TD Bank made a joke that went something like this: A couple months ago his bank wasn’t among, say, the top 20 largest banks, now they’re something like fifth or sixth. And then the punch line: In a couple more weeks, even if his bank would likely be, say, third or fourth, through little or no action of its own, RBC is even higher. The World Economic Forum recently ranked Canadian banks the most stable in the world. For these reasons, Toronto is well-positioned to move up in the ranks of global financial centers. No, it won’t topple NY or London, but with banks this big and this stable, it will gain ground. And with employment opportunities eroding in these centers, it can make a big move on top global talent.

Toronto has the opportunity to occupy a relatively unique space among global cities, still beneath the largest global centers, like NY and London, but gaining ground on them, and in a relatively unique and advantaged position as the most vibrant of the so-called “second cities.”

Toronto has a very advantageous economic structure, comparatively speaking. Our MPI team has been collecting, analyzing, and studying data on the industrial and occupational composition of Toronto versus other U.S. and Canadian cities and some other global cities. Led by Kevin Stolarick, our goal is to have matched data on the micro-functionings of the U.S. and Canadian cities and regions, in terms of industries and occupations for every metropolitan level jurisdiction and city across the two countries.

From what we can glean – and expect much more on this to come – Toronto has one of the very fastest metabolizing occupational and industrial metabolic structures of any city with strengths in media, entertainment, design, and creative industries as well as finance. These are the sectors that move at the highest velocity. And it has real technological capability in its orbit with Kitchener-Waterloo and RIM nearby.

Toronto is as diverse, if not more so, then NY, London, or even L.A. Plus, it has an unusually high degree of social cohesion. Add to that great universities that are moving up, great and improving music and arts scenes, and relatively affordable housing, at least by world comparative standards. And you get the picture – a city ready to move up the global ranks.

Yes, Toronto certainly has issues and problems to overcome. Inequality has grown a la David Hulchanski and company’s remarkable “Three Toronto’s” study report. Parts of the region’s older manufacturing economy is suffering and the region as a whole is more geographically segmented and spiky then before.

But the assets are considerable. Leadership “gets it” from the Premier to the Mayor, other political leaders across the region – mayors, legislators, councilors, and economic development officials, university leaders, the non-profit sector, the arts and culture community, labor, environmentalists, and key segments of the business community – all of them are literally moving in the same direction.

You can literally feel the momentum.

There’s only one thing left to do. Stop looking south for models. They ain’t there. The U.S. and its key cities are in deep crisis. Toronto has a golden opportunity to become a model and lead not just for Canada but for North America and the world.

Will we take it?

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Thu Feb 12th 2009 at 8:30am EST

The Great Reset

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

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?

That’s from my article, “How the Crisis Will Reshape America” from the just-released March issue of The Atlantic. It’s my first full-length feature for the magazine and I’m delighted that it made the cover. There are actually several different covers including one for New York, Chicago, and my new hometown of Toronto, among others.

There’s also an interview with me online here under the title, “The Great Reset,” which is the working title of the book I’m developing.

Plus a series of interactive maps based on research and data analysis by our team at the Martin Prosperity Institute.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Mon Nov 10th 2008 at 8:23am EST

Tor-Buff Bills

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Greg Easterbrook in The Atlantic:

The Bills could help forge mutual affection between the cities—even a regional identity. Buffalo’s civic promotion has generally reached southward; in this newly globalized world, it should reach northward, toward a country that is as underappreciated among nations as Buffalo is among cities.

Connections to cosmopolitan, multi­cultural Toronto might change Buffalo’s image from backward-­focused to wave-of-the-future. Toronto is growing by leaps and bounds, and some portion of the growth may already be spilling over; most of the immigrants to Buffalo in recent years were Canadian. Buffalo offers urban living free of traffic jams and boasts one of the nation’s last under­developed stretches of premium waterfront. During its City of Light heyday, when Buffalo was the first electrified metropolis, Frank Lloyd Wright, Frederick Law Olmsted, and other fabled names designed homes and parks. In the lovely Delaware Park area, magnificent Beaux Arts homes sell at exceedingly low prices compared with homes in elite U.S. cities—or in Toronto.

So long as the Bills keep a foot in the city, they keep alive the dream of a Super Bowl win—a hope that an infusion of Loonies (Canadian dollars) might sustain. And should the Bills win the Super Bowl, Buffalo will return to national prominence. I don’t just think this will happen, I know it will.

It’s all about the mega…