How the Financial Crisis May Not Be So Bad for New York
We just got around to reading the cover story of the current issue of The Atlantic Monthly called How the Crash Will Reshape America. One of the article’s central points is that while hubs of intellectual and creative capital like New York will surely suffer in the economic crisis, they will suffer a lot less…

We just got around to reading the cover story of the current issue of The Atlantic Monthly called How the Crash Will Reshape America. One of the article’s central points is that while hubs of intellectual and creative capital like New York will surely suffer in the economic crisis, they will suffer a lot less than second-tier cities, the suburbs or industrial areas and therefore benefit on a relative basis. While there has been much hand-wringing about New York’s reliance upon the finance industry, many other smaller cities, it turns out, are much more reliant: Hartford, Des Moines and Charlotte, to name a few. Rather, New York is an incredibly diverse place which should be well-positioned to reinvent itself faster and more efficiently than other places:
New York is much, much more than a financial center…It is home to a diverse and innovative economy built around a broad range of creative industries, from media to design to arts and entertainment. It is home to high-tech companies like Bloomberg, and boasts a thriving Google outpost in its Chelsea neighborhood… New York is more of a mecca for fashion designers, musicians, film directors, artists, and—yes—psychiatrists than for financial professionals…The financial crisis may ultimately help New York by reenergizing its creative economy…Place still matters in the modern economy—and the competitive advantage of the world’s most successful city-regions seems to be growing, not shrinking…Talent-rich ecosystems are not easy to replicate, and to realize their full economic value, talented and ambitious people increasingly need to live within them…Economic crises tend to reinforce and accelerate the underlying, long-term trends within an economy [like the map of per capita patent creation above]… In this case, the economy is shifting away from manufacturing and toward idea-driven creative industries—and that, too, favors America’s talent-rich, fast-metabolizing places.
Sounds good so far, right? Here’s how the trends will play out on the American landscape, according to the author Richard Florida:
What will this geography look like? It will likely be sparser in the Midwest and also, ultimately, in those parts of the Southeast that are dependent on manufacturing. Its suburbs will be thinner and its houses, perhaps, smaller. Some of its southwestern cities will grow less quickly. Its great mega-regions will rise farther upward and extend farther outward. It will feature a lower rate of homeownership, and a more mobile population of renters. In short, it will be a more concentrated geography, one that allows more people to mix more freely and interact more efficiently in a discrete number of dense, innovative mega-regions and creative cities. Serendipitously, it will be a landscape suited to a world in which petroleum is no longer cheap by any measure. But most of all, it will be a landscape that can accommodate and accelerate invention, innovation, and creation—the activities in which the U.S. still holds a big competitive advantage.
Sounds like we’re sitting pretty, huh?
How the Crash Will Reshape America [The Atlantic]
This will be fun!!!!
Repeat after me, Mr. Pandit: “Would you like fries and a pie with that?”
omg 11217 is there EVER a thread that you dont talk about youre “friends”?!? my friends this my friends that everyone wants to move to nyc. especially park slope. the center of the free-thinking world. it’s getting pretty old.
*r*
I can see a SNL skit on the retraining of bankers!!!!
I totally agree with this article, and think I’ve been trying to say this for the past few months, although not nearly as eloquently as this article does so.
In the circle of friends, acquaintances, colleagues and people I’ve met as well as those from undergrad, graduate school and doctoral work…nearly everyone I know wants to be in New York. I know that doesn’t jive necessarily with what a lot of you might experience, but this IS the center of the creative Western World for many. Falling prices have already enticed a few of my friends from places like Illinois, Arizona, Nebraska and California and I only expect that to continue as prices drop even farther.
I also think that the Mayor’s plan to retrain bankers is a step in the right direction. Here’s the article about that from yesterday:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/19/nyregion/19bankers.html?_r=1&ref=nyregion
FatLenny…some of us met rob at the last party. Unfortunately, he is not sixteen. He just turned 32 if I remember his birthday story a week or two ago..
HOW MANY TIMES DO I HAVE TO TELL YOU PEOPLE I HAVE BEEN TO THE PARK. I WENT ONCE! I SAW HORSES WALKING AROUND FREELY AND LEFT AND NEVER WENT BACK! sheesh like it’s a crime to live in park slope and not go to the park? the lake or pond or whatever it was i thought was rather nasty and gross anyway.
maybe it’s a luddite point of view. i dont know. i just think nyc takes itself too seriously and i dont identify with it. but according to a lot of people just because i dont identify with it or take advantage of all the things nyc has to offer, i should leave? um no. im staying. sorry!
*r*
I remember when Walkman was hot.
Putnamdenizen…As a gay man in my late 20s and 30s during the 80s, the only reason I’m still alive is because I stayed in Chicago!!!! That said I’ve always wanted to live in SF and the architecture was one of the key draws.