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CURRENT LETTER

 
The Kiplinger Washington Editors
Sept. 26, 2008
 

What Will Be Different
When the Smoke Clears?

When the financial and legislative turmoil over Wall Street debt clears, what will be different? This week’s Kiplinger Letter looks at 10 changes that will make America’s economic landscape look more like it did five to 10 years ago.
 
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About a year ago I started a golf accessory online business . I would like to know how I can best market the site to get more visibility from customers as well as differentiating myself from other golf online store.
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Cities that Work for Business -- and Their Customers

While high-end cities try to appeal to the "creative class," "opportunity urbanism" aims at building a broad business base and strong middle-class.
 
 
Joel Kotkin
Chapman University
Joel Kotkin is the author of The City: A Global History and is Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University in Orange, Calif. He is also a senior fellow with the New America Foundation in Washington and a senior fellow with the Center for an Urban Future in New York.

As many businesses know -- and many smaller businesses are hurt by -- there is a war on. Cities are fighting each others to attract business, often trying to lure large corporations with benefits usually not afforded to smaller companies already operating in the area. And some cities often try to attract business by making themselves attractive to the young, upwardly mobile and trained "creative class that many companies are scrambling to hire.

But such strategies mean setting up a competition that only a handful of cities such as San Francisco and Boston can really win because they cater to an elite class. Joel Kotkin, a nationally recognized expert on urban revitalization and planning, argues that building and maintaining a stronger middle-class will do far more to revive and sustain cities and the businesses and create economic possibilities.

The key, he says, is for cities to create a comfortable quality of life combined with a reasonable cost of living. "What we have found … is that most working people have more real income -- measured by what they can buy, given their average incomes -- in a place such as Houston than they do in superstar cities such as New York, Los Angeles or San Francisco," he writes. That has made Houston and other growing Sunbelt cities a destination for many of the educated and well-trained talent that businesses are hunting for. "These cities are also showing marked gains in attracting high-wage employers and educated migrants, including members of the ballyhooed 'creative class,'" he writes. "These are, of course, the very jobs and workers that are widely thought to be concentrating in more elite places."

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POSTED BY: adambosnyc (July 25, 2008 12:17 PM)
After reading several articles indicating where young professionals should locate based on cost of living it does not seem to take into account that these new "opportunity cities" simply do not have the same vibrance as more traditionaly alive cities such as NYC or San Francisco. Where would they all live if price werent a factor? Try New York. Dallas doesnt quite have the same panache. 600 dollar rent will never change this.

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