The Citistates Group presents

Oops! Fast City Growth May = Lower Incomes

Mary Newsom / Jan 28 2011

For Release Sunday, January 30, 2011
Citiwire.net

Mary NewsomOptimists prefer to look forward, not back. But especially during a month named for the two-headed Roman god Janus — a month when state legislatures are convening only to face mammoth budget shortfalls — maybe we all need a clear-eyed look backward as well as ahead.

A look back at the past decade from an Oregon consulting company, Fodor & Associates, ought to get plenty of people thinking about whether some assumptions of the past need re-examining. The report looked at growth rates and prosperity in the 100 largest U.S. metro areas. Its findings may challenge a bedrock assumption for many local and state government leaders, that “growth” in and of itself automatically brings jobs and more wealth.

Fodor looked at 2000-2009 data and found that on a series of measures, fast-growing cities were less prosperous than slow-growing ones. Fast-growing cities had lower incomes and during the Great Recession (i.e. 2007-09) saw greater income drops. He found no correlation between growth rate and unemployment.

I have some quibbles with his methods: His report doesn’t appear to have looked at whether fast-growing cities might, until the recession slammed them, have had greater income growth. Many of the fast-growing cities are in the South, where incomes were lower to start with and where the recession has hit particularly hard.

But Fodor’s point is that this bedrock assumption that growth automatically brings prosperity might not be true after all.

This column shouldn’t be taken as an endorsement of the “stop growth” genre of activism. Because metros and economies are complex in ways that aren’t always readily apparent, efforts to restrict growth — like allowing only low-density, single-family subdivisions — can have unintended consequences, such as driving up housing prices. They can result in economic or racial segregation. One town’s efforts to fend off growth can force new growth to sprawl farther out.

I showed the Fodor study to Ike Heard, who teaches urban planning and economic development at UNC Charlotte. He pointed to possible reasons for lower incomes in fast-growing cities: Job seekers, especially the young, who tend to be paid less, and the homeless head for growing cities. High growth areas attract megastores (Wal-Mart, etc.), and their impact tends to depress pay levels for low-skill workers. And where employers can choose from many available workers, they may hire those who’ll work for less.

So while this isn’t an anti-growth manifesto, policymakers everywhere might be well advised that maybe it’s not so smart to pin their state’s or city’s future on a belief that may be only myth — that growth automatically brings prosperity.

It’s particularly ill-advised at a time when so many places’ prosperity seems at risk, and so many governments are staring into a frightening budget abyss. The National Conference of State Legislatures last July estimated that the states’ aggregated budget gap for fiscal year 2010-11 was at least $83.9 billion. And 35 states project budget gaps for the next budget year, estimated at a total of $82.1 billion.

Similarly, the National League of Cities in May found that three-quarters of city officials were reporting that overall economic and fiscal conditions had worsened during the past year, with 22 percent of cities saying they’d already had to make cuts in public safety — usually a last-resort area for budget cutting.

In my city, Charlotte, the local newspaper for which I work has over the past few years run a variety of articles about problems like gangs, crime, foreclosures and high-poverty schools. Maps of the city ran with the articles, and if you layered the maps over one another you’d see they all dealt with basically the same area — an arc almost encircling the downtown, except for the affluent southern quadrant. It’s a collection of neighborhoods the city government characterizes as “challenged” or “transitioning.” And it’s where the city’s growth policies allowed large numbers of single-family-home, suburban-style starter-home subdivisions — subdivisions where foreclosures now cause big problems.

In large part because of those low-income subdivisions, more than half the residential property sales in the county in 2010 involved foreclosed or on-the-brink homes. Similar problems exist elsewhere in the country, of course, in fast-growing Las Vegas, Florida and parts of the Pacific Northwest, among other spots. The foreclosures bite deep into local property tax bases, lowering property values across the spectrum and reducing governments’ ability to provide essential services like public schooling, mental health services and even police protection.

In Charlotte, city policies blessed the building of mile after mile of starter-home subdivisions. While a developer trying to build a mixed-use project at a light rail stop would endure months of bureaucratic torture in order to win the political support for a rezoning, those cheap subdivisions didn’t even require rezonings or City Council votes. That’s because decades ago the city zoned all undeveloped land for single-family, suburban-style subdivisions — no rezonings needed, development on auto-pilot. And the reason, naturally, was to encourage growth — because we all know that growth brings prosperity. Except, apparently, when it doesn’t.

Janus symbolized transitions — from youth to maturity, from past to future. The old god would probably understand what the nation’s once-booming cities need to do now: to look backward with a clear vision, to see which old beliefs and habits need reassessing, so that the future can learn from the past.


Mary Newsom is an associate editor and opinion writer at the Charlotte Observer, where she writes a weekly column, writes The Naked City blog at www.marynewsom.blogspot.com, and Tweets @marynewsom.

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3 Comments

  1. Posted January 28, 2011 at 8:19 pm | Permalink

    Whether growth brings economic improvement for workers depends on the incentives which are used to promote growth. If industries and business are offered special taxvincentives such as have been offered to Google, it results in either services being cut or other taxes being needed to make up the loss. It puts existing businesses at a disadvantage, since they must compete against a company that has a tax advantage.

    On the other hand if we shift taxes from work (sales tax, wage tax, business tax, the building portion of the real estate tax), to taxes on pollution and the land portion of the real estate tax, we encourage growth, especially in the number of jobs and their salary, as well a a cleaner environment.

    In particular if we shift taxes to Land Value Tax, that is, a tax based on the market value of the land being claim for one’s exclusive use, we encourage frugal use of land and create more jobs per acre because employers are paying tax at the same time they are paying land rent.
    See: http://taxworkortaxdirt.blogspot.com/2010/04/what-happens-when-you-go-for-job.html

  2. Posted January 31, 2011 at 11:40 pm | Permalink

    Too often, we fail to define “growth.” If we are talking about new goods and services that have value to others, that is a very different type of growth than inflation in the value of existing things (land, Rembrandt paintings, issued stocks, etc.) as a result of speculation.
    Joe Johnston is correct that tax shifting can promote real economic growth (new goods & services) while holding speculation and environmental degradation in check. For more information on techniques to accomplish this, see http://www.justeconomicsllc.com .

  3. Posted February 2, 2011 at 1:06 pm | Permalink

    An Old City Lesson

    I would add one point. Most of the older post WWII core cities have a message for leaders of the American “Sprawland” as described:

    You will have to change. Growth is as inevitable as the catastrophic resolutions that deal with it. I know, I lived through them in New York City. It took NYC nearly three decades to address these issues. They are not new. We were lucky, but you may not have that much time. The NYC message is this. We can boast of a massive capacity for up-rezoning in ticker tape across the center of our planning department website. It says, “Since 2002, 108 re-zonings, covering over 9,400 blocks, have been adopted”

    Why? In order to borrow the funds to prepare for growth and change, the ratable (in this case – the potential of more square feet) must exist first. NYC has always accommodated modest slips and severe dips in median income and yet it prospers as it provides for its people for this reason.

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