Today's forbes.com has the following article about the declining economy in the Rust Belt. The article implicitly coincides with my earlier point about why Mitt Romney's presence on the Republican ticket as VP won't help McCain win the presidency (by winning Michigan's electoral votes): the economy is worst in the industrial midwest, and not likely to improve in the foreseeable future.
Ironically, however, the very problems created during dubya's administration may turn out to be John McCain's salvation in the industrial midwest: the economy is SO bad that people have been moving away from the area, and hence won't be there to vote in November for change that will help their cities.
Here's Jonathan Zumbrun's article, excerpted for this post:
"Where's it worst? Ohio, according to our analysis, which racked up four of the 10 cities on our list: Youngstown, Canton, Dayton and Cleveland. The runner-up is Michigan, with two cities--Detroit and Flint--making the ranking. These, and four other metropolitan statistical areas, as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau, face fleeing populations, painful waves of unemployment and barely growing economies. By our measure, they've struggled the worst of any areas in the nation in the 21st century. And they face even bleaker futures...."
"Another brutal statistic all the cities share is a diminishing population. So far this decade, 115,000 people have left Cleveland, for other climes. Smaller changes in other regions can be just as painful. Nearly 30,000 people have left Youngstown, Ohio, and they aren't being replaced by either new babies or new immigrants...."
"The worst news is, of course, economic. When we looked at the most recent gross domestic product estimates for 155 metropolitan statistical areas estimated to have $10 billion or more GDP in 2005--economies about the size of Asheville, N.C., or Tallahassee, Fla.--the news was predictably terrible for the Rust Belt."
"In the fall of 2007, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) published its GDP estimates from 2001 to 2005. Nearly every city in the country grew during this period (New Orleans, devastated from Hurricane Katrina, was the notable exception), but the struggling cities on our list grew more sluggishly. None of them grew more than 1.9% a year, versus a nationwide average of 2.7%. Canton, Ohio, managed to grow its economy just 0.7% annually. Flint was worse still at 0.4%."
"None of these cities now face the huge declines in real estate prices seen by Phoenix, Miami or Las Vegas, where the Case-Shiller Home Price Index shows nearly 30% declines from a year ago. Detroit is off only about 15%, Cleveland only 8%. Don't call it a bright spot. Prices never went up in the first place."
-- triton --
Friday, August 8, 2008
#53 The Rust Belt and Romney
Labels:
Canton,
Cleveland,
Dayton,
Detroit,
Flint,
John McCain,
Michigan,
Mitt Romney,
Ohio,
Rust Belt,
Youngstown
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