How the Crash Will Reshape America

The crash of 2008 continues to reverberate loudly nationwide—destroying jobs, bankrupting businesses, and displacing homeowners. But already, it has damaged some places much more severely than others. On the other side of the crisis, America’s economic landscape will look very different than it does today. What fate will the coming years hold for New York, Charlotte, Detroit, Las Vegas? Will the suburbs be ineffably changed? Which cities and regions can come back strong? And which will never come back at all?

“A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.” The United States, whatever its flaws, has seldom wasted its crises in the past. On the contrary, it has used them, time and again, to reinvent itself, clearing away the old and making way for the new. Throughout U.S. history, adaptability has been perhaps the best and most quintessential of American attributes. Over the course of the 19th century’s Long Depression, the country remade itself from an ... Full Story »

Posted by Kaizar Campwala
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Posted by: Posted by Kaizar Campwala - Feb 19, 2009 - 11:38 AM PST
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Edited by: Kaizar Campwala - Feb 19, 2009 - 11:38 AM PST

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Kaizar Campwala
4.2
by Kaizar Campwala - Feb. 19, 2009

This was an enjoyable read, but I didn't find the reporting particularly enterprising, nor the approach very unique.

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Walter Cox
4.3
by Walter Cox - Mar. 21, 2009

Already the outer suburbs of the San Francisco Bay Area have become havens for inner city drug kingpins and prostitutes, replete with drive-by shootings and the generalized decline that always accompanies criminality. This article surveys the beginnings of a sea change in our culture, one that will shape all of us, but especially the very young. None of the old assumptions hold, and this article makes that clear.

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Kenneth Sibbett
4.6
by Kenneth Sibbett - Feb. 19, 2009

An excellent report of the past and future of the American economy. If the authors assertions are true, the demographics of this nation will change in the coming decades. The author and other experts make a good point. Don't have a crisis and learn nothing from it. Americans have always been an innovated and inventive society. Changing with the times is our up- most challenge.

We've changed from and agricultural society, to and industrial society to an technological society. We have the best universities and the hardest working people in th world. Now that the spend to you drop era is over, maybe people will start living within our means.

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William Hughes-Games
5.0
by William Hughes-Games - Feb. 19, 2009

Aa good provocative historical (no way hysterical) presentation of various aspects of the situation.

The very over-consumption of the 'West' was what the 'East' depended on to facilitate the transfer of wealth to their shores. Now with the drying up of that market, the East is going to have to look to her internal markets. To do that, she will have to make sure her population has money to be able to purchase her own goods (Henry Ford all over again). That will raise wages and when the dust settles, the East will be in a far less favorable situation vis a vis the production of ... More »

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