“This is not supposed to happen to Kansas City. However, yesterday, Joel Kotkin, on a national radio program, yes national, told the national audience how he thought Kansas City is beautiful, settled, stable….this really worries me. ”
Author: Kaitlin Hopkins
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on The City Journal regarding California
As Joel Kotkin of NewGeography.com wrote last year, “California can still attract many newcomers, particularly young and ambitious people who dream of a career in Hollywood or Silicon Valley. The problem is that when you grow up and have failed to secure your own dotcom or television series, life in Texas, Arizona, North Carolina, or even Kansas starts looking better.”
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on Al.com regarding Mobile, Alabama
“I’ve been very impressed with what you’ve been doing here, investing in your ports and infrastructure, and working to bring in more manufacturing jobs,” Joel Kotkin, a professor at Chapman University in Orange, Calif., told the crowd at Envision Coastal Alabama’s annual meeting at the Grand Hotel Marriott Resort.
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Editor WENDELL COX on The Mercatus Center regarding migration
“That is why this week’s release of this study by Wendell Cox and E.J. McMahon of The Empire Center is so striking. The authors calculate U.S. migration patterns between 2000 and 2008. New York, on net, lost over 1.5 million people. California lost 1.3 million. Illinois lost over half a million. Michigan and New Jersey round out the top five each losing over 400,000 people.”
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Contributing Editor MICHAEL LIND in Salon regarding jobs
“According to official statistics, the unemployment rate in the United States is now 9.8 percent. But those statistics understate the severity of the jobs crisis. The official statistics do not include the 875,000 Americans who have given up looking for work, even though they want jobs. When these “marginally attached” workers and part-time workers are added to the officially unemployed, the result, according to another, broader governement measure of unemployment known as “U-6,” is shocking. The United States has an unemployment rate of 17 percent.”
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Editor WENDELL COX on RocEarth regarding New York
“Wendell Cox, an Illinois-based researcher who led the study, said New York, particularly in the New York City area, had seen home prices greatly outpace incomes compared with other states. Also, New York is among the highest taxed states in the country, he said.”
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on Suburban Girl in the Big City regarding city theory
“’Uncool Cities’ by Joel Kotkin argues the complete other side of the argument presented by Richard Florida. Kotkin’s argument is that a city will not grow if it only appeals to the creative class. His focus is on how cities are losing population to the suburbs. He also focuses on the important aspects of a failing city such as housing, educational facilities, transportation methods, occupation issues and the issue of safety.”
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on The Chicago Tribune regarding nomadic Americans
“Urban scholar Joel Kotkin, writing in Newsweek magazine, describes the American nomad as something of an endangered species: ‘Perhaps nothing will be as surprising about 21st century America as its settledness.’”
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on The Age Australia regarding aging populations
“In Newsweek this month, the American urban development scholar Joel Kotkin noted a fall in American movers. Between the 1970s and 2006, the proportion of Americans who shifted house each year fell from about 20 per cent to 14 per cent.”
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on IStock Analyst regarding Americans and cities
As a puny yet honest attempt to show you that I actually read other things than plain economics I thought that I would share this piece with you on declining nomadism amongst Americans; it is written for Newsweek by author Joel Kotkin. I am not quite sure whether he believes the aging of the population to be the decisive factor contributing to the rise of localism which he speaks about or just a factor among many. I would presume that sociologists and historians could find an explanation for this development in their distinct theoretical tool kits too without invoking the demographic evolution. Although, it is tempting to go for a nostalgic narrative here I don’t think this is appropriate. To me, an increase in physical localism could go well hand in hand with an ever greater degree of global integration and social mobility in the non-physical sense.