In the wake of the 2012 presidential election, some political commentators have written political obituaries of the "red" or conservative-leaning states, envisioning a brave new world dominated by fashionably blue bastions in the Northeast or California. But political fortunes are notoriously fickle, while economic trends tend to be more enduring.
These trends point to a U.S. economic future dominated by four growth corridors that are generally less dense, more affordable, and markedly more conservative and pro-business: the Great Plains, the Intermountain West, the Third Coast (spanning the Gulf states from Texas to Florida), and the Southeastern industrial belt.
Read or download the full report from the Manhattan Institute.
Overall, these corridors account for 45% of the nation's land mass and 30% of its population. Between 2001 and 2011, job growth in the Great Plains, the Intermountain West and the Third Coast was between 7% and 8%—nearly 10 times the job growth rate for the rest of the country. Only the Southeastern industrial belt tracked close to the national average.
Historically, these regions were little more than resource colonies or low-wage labor sites for richer, more technically advanced areas. By promoting policies that encourage enterprise and spark economic growth, they're catching up.
Such policies have been pursued not only by Republicans but also by Democrats who don't share their national party's notion that business should serve as a cash cow to fund ever more expensive social-welfare, cultural or environmental programs. While California, Illinois, New York, Massachusetts and Minnesota have either enacted or pursued higher income taxes, many corridor states have no income taxes or are planning, like Kansas and Louisiana, to lower or even eliminate them.
The result is that corridor states took 11 of the top 15 spots in Chief Executive magazine's 2012 review of best state business climates. California, New York, Illinois and Massachusetts were at the bottom. The states of the old Confederacy boast 10 of the top 12 places for locating new plants, according to a recent 2012 study by Site Selection magazine.
Energy, manufacturing and agriculture are playing a major role in the corridor states' revival. The resurgence of fossil fuel–based energy, notably shale oil and natural gas, is especially important. Over the past decade, Texas alone has added 180,000 mostly high-paying energy-related jobs, Oklahoma another 40,000, and the Intermountain West well over 30,000. Energy-rich California, despite the nation's third-highest unemployment rate, has created a mere 20,000 such jobs. In New York, meanwhile, Gov. Andrew Cuomo is still delaying a decision on hydraulic fracturing.
Cheap U.S. natural gas has some envisioning the Mississippi River between New Orleans and Baton Rouge as an "American Ruhr." Much of this growth, notes Eric Smith, associate director of the Tulane Energy Institute, will be financed by German and other European firms that are reeling from electricity costs now three times higher than in places like Louisiana.
Korean and Japanese firms are already swarming into South Carolina, Alabama and Tennessee. What the Boston Consulting Group calls a "reallocation of global manufacturing" is shifting production away from expensive East Asia and Europe and toward these lower-cost locales. The arrival of auto, steel and petrochemical plants—and, increasingly, the aerospace industry—reflects a critical shift for the Southeast, which historically depended on lower-wage industries such as textiles and furniture.
Since 2000, the Intermountain West's population has grown by 20%, the Third Coast's by 14%, the long-depopulating Great Plains by over 14%, and the Southeast by 13%. Population in the rest of the U.S. has grown barely 7%. Last year, the largest net recipients of domestic migrants were Texas and Florida, which between them gained 150,000. The biggest losers? New York, New Jersey, Illinois and California.
As a result, the corridors are home to most of America's fastest-growing big cities, including Charlotte, Raleigh, Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Salt Lake City, Oklahoma City and Denver. Critically for the economic and political future, the growth corridor seems particularly appealing to young families with children.
Cities such as Raleigh, Charlotte, Austin, Dallas and Houston enjoy among the country's fastest growth rates in the under-15 population. That demographic is on the wane in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco. Immigrants, too, flock to once-unfamiliar places like Nashville, Charlotte and Oklahoma City. Houston and Dallas already have more new immigrants per capita than Boston, Philadelphia, Seattle and Chicago.
Coastal-city boosters suggest that what they lose in numbers they make up for in "quality" migration. "The Feet are moving south and west while the Brains are moving toward coastal cities," Derek Thompson wrote a few years ago in The Atlantic. Yet over the past decade, the number of people with bachelor's degrees grew by a remarkable 50% in Austin and Charlotte and by over 30% in Tampa, Houston, Dallas and Atlanta—a far greater percentage growth rate than in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago or New York.
Raleigh, Austin, Denver and Salt Lake City have all become high-tech hubs. Charlotte is now the country's second-largest financial center. Houston isn't only the world's energy capital but also boasts the world's largest medical center and, along with Dallas, has become a major corporate and global transportation hub.
The corridors' growing success is a testament to the resiliency and adaptability of the American economy. It also challenges the established coastal states and cities to reconsider their current high-tax, high-regulation climates if they would like to join the growth party.
Read or download the full report from the Manhattan Institute.
Joel Kotkin is executive editor of NewGeography.com and a distinguished presidential fellow in urban futures at Chapman University, and a member of the editorial board of the Orange County Register. He is author of The City: A Global History and The Next Hundred Million: America in 2050. His most recent study, The Rise of Postfamilialism, has been widely discussed and distributed internationally. He lives in Los Angeles, CA.
This piece first appeared in the Wall Street Journal.
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Just the facts please
Why must everything Joel Kotkin writes be so over-the-top political? Do we need a Rush Limbaugh of geographic research? I don't dispute that the articles in Atlantic Cities have a liberal slant, but they're written about the topic at hand, and don't read like attack ads on New Geography or Joel Kotkin personally. I'm all for different points of view and understanding the competitive advantages of different regions, but is it really necessary to frame population growth rates in the Southeast in terms of "the states of the old Confederacy"?
Sorry, yet another misread.
"The states of the old Confederacy boast 10 of the top 12 places for locating new plants, according to a recent 2012 study by Site Selection magazine."
And why?
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/03/us/winners-and-losers-in-texas.html?pa...
"Under Mr. Perry, Texas gives out more of the incentives than any other state, "
It's all corporate welfare.
Quality compared to Quantity
It was interesting to see the comment about quality vs. quantity. Just because an oil field attracts someone with a college degree does not mean that it is automatically good job. It might just mean that unemployment is so bad that people are willing to take bad jobs.
It is also mixes cause and effect to suggest that New York could join in the boom by lowering taxes and eliminating environmental protections. These tactics worked in Alaska and Texas because they have massive energy reserves. (Oil drilling companies aren't going to move to New York just because the taxes are lowered, there also has to be oil.)
Finally, I would question the long-term viability of attracting jobs just by saying businesses can pollute as much as they want. Florida has a $65 billion tourist industry, that relies on clean beaches, clean water, and good fishing around the 'glades. How many big polluters would it take to cripple that industry? Two? Ten?
In 1999, Houston passed Los Angeles as having the most polluted air in the United States (defined by the number of days each city violates federal smog standards.) How many jobs would it generate to relocate that same dangerous air to Disney World?
Not that tourism jobs pay all that well, but if all we are doing is racing to the bottom, it might be just as easy to attract people with nice roads, good schools, and safe air.
Providence and Reason seem to go together
Joel Kotkin is a most important analyst of these trends that are being missed by the mainstream.
There is quite a correlation between this phenomenon of economic growth and the pro-urban-growth policies that have kept the price of houses and commercial premises low. Similar attitudes seem to apply to the willingness to allow the extraction of natural resources under the ground, such as natural gas, and the willingness to allow the use of the resource of abundant land surrounding cities, for people to build houses on.
I see a cultural element in this; the IMF actually found a correlation between the percentage of evangelicals in the population, and the stability of house prices (refer IMF: "Irrational Exuberance in U.S. Housing: Were Evangelicals Left Behind?"). Of course when people believe God gave them land and resources to use, they will be less likely to succumb to the excesses of the ecological and urbanist ideologies.
Even with lower incomes on average, these regions end up well ahead after cost-of-living adjustments. And it seems that higher-income economic sectors are joining the flow to these regions.
Ironically, in the places in the USA where housing has previously bubbled the most in price, and then collapsed, and is now bubbling again, there seems to be no connection at all between underlying fundamentals of economic growth, population growth and employment growth; and house prices. The connection seems to be with local policies regarding land use, and endogenously to this, speculative mania.
The same local culture that prohibits suburban expansion inevitably resists the extraction of ANY natural resources as well. It is as if a kind of neo-paganism fills the vacuum left by Christianity. So much for the sophistication and "reason" alleged to be the basis of secular liberalism.
“Stimulative” low interest rates feed into higher household discretionary spending and increased economic activity, in regions with minimal land use regulation; while in regions with barriers (mostly regulatory) to the conversion of low-cost rural land to urban uses, low interest rates feed into higher house prices and higher debt.
US trade corridors from infrastructure, supply chain standpoint
This 2011 article from Area Development looks at the U.S trade corridors formed and linked by intermodal transportation and infrastructure - a key ingredient that must also be in place in addition to the local policies and conditions that encourage enterprise
Transport infrastructure chains
That is a very interesting report, Justin.
I can see that another advantage to these new growth corridors, is that their rail and intermodal transport systems are far more likely to be "best practice" and latest technology, compared to what exists in "old" USA.
Being able to do infrastructure on lower cost land and with less disruption of a long-existing and often built-out and congested local economy, is actually often superior to trying to upgrade existing infrastructure in which no planning was ever devoted to ease of upgrading. Shlomo Angel et al in "Making Room for a Planet of Cities" have an interesting section on this point.
Report filename
Joel,
You should use a better, more descriptive filename for the report.
cr75.pdf is pathetic.
How about America's Growth Corridors - The Key to a National Revival.pdf ?
,dave