Posted on 05/06/2009 3:38:14 PM PDT by Leisler
As I mentioned in my last post, my son and I watch Life After People on the history channel. In the last episode, Outbreak the show used the abandon buildings of the downtown of a major American city as real world examples of how quickly abandoned buildings fall into decay.
No, the abandoned buildings were not in Detriot, they were in downtown Gary, Indiana.
How many of these abandoned areas are there in the Great Lake region? Most people point the finger at the auto industry to explain the fall of Detroit but what explains the fall of Gary?
Steel. Gary was founded in 1907 by U.S. Steel as a company town. U.S. Steel built Gary because it was great place to make steel in 1907. Gary grew because for the next 60 years it was a great place to make steel. Then suddenly Gary stopped being a competitive place to make steel. Why?
More importantly, why dont all regions that lose a major industry suffer the same decay?
Part of the fall of Gary results from a natural and universal processes of the evolution of technology. Even if Gary still produced the same percentage of American steel that it did in its heyday, it would have seen an economic decline.
However, thats not the main story. A lot of regions have faced the collapse of their primary industry and not only survived but thrived. The end of energy crisis in the mid-80s came with a massive collapse of oil prices that devastated the economies of Texas and the other oil field states. The states entered a five year recessions so severe that some economist classified it as an actual depression.
The region was even more proportionately dependent on gas and oil than either Detroit or Gary were on their principle industries. Yet, the oil field states, especially Texas, not only recovered but created new industries and boomed. Why could the cities of Texas reinvent themselves while the cities of the Great Lakes still cannot?
I think the answer lays in the differences in political culture between the two regions. Texans still think of ourselves as rugged, independent, frontier people even if were standing in line at Starbucks for a latte. This self conception in turn leads to a political culture in which people do not default to government coercion to solve economic problems. We prefer to think of ourselves as people who individually create our own solutions.
The end of Gary began in 1959 with a six month long nation wide steel strike. The Unions primary goal in the strike was to prevent the steel industry from modernizing the plants built during the 30s and WWII. Like all modernizations, the new steel making technology would allow the companies to make more steel with less manpower. In order for the Steel industry to adapt and remain competative competitive, it had to make due with a smaller workforce. The unions, interested in nothing but controlling the maximum number of workers, said no. In the end, they got new contracts blocking modernization.
The six month long strike caused all major consumers of steel to start buying steel outside America for the first time even though foreign cost more and was of inferior quality. Steel consumers knew that expensive inferior steel was better than no steel at all and the unions had made it very clear that they were willing to put everyone else out of job to keep their privileged economic position.
Most people who blame foreign competition for the decline of American steel blame the low labor cost of developing countries for foreign producers competitive advantage but low labor cost were ultimately a minor component of the foreign advantage. Their real advantage came from modern factories. While unions trapped American producers with 1940s era plants, foreign competitors could build plants with 1960-1970s era technology. Even if labor cost had been perfectly equal, the union driven technological stasis doomed American steel.
Gary was ultimately destroyed by unions and the penumbra of political policies accompany the political culture that creates unions. Worse, that same political culture kept Gary from attracting or generating new industries.
When oil failed in Texas, the states political culture did not impede the development of new industries. In the Great Lakes region, business people are treated like like criminals who steal from working people. In Texas, theyre treated like heros who create jobs and wealth. Texas culture allowed new industries to arise to take the place of oil. Good paying jobs in the oil fields were replaced by good paying jobs in manufacturing, high tech, finance and a plethora of small businesses. Garys political culture prevented a similar adaptive change.
Frankly, I dont see any hope for major change in Gary or similar communities in the Great Lake region. Fish are not aware of water and the people of the Great Lakes region do not seem to be aware of destructive effects of political culture they live emerged in. High taxes, invasive regulation and runaway unions are simply so common that people think of the them as the natural, default condition and therefor not conceivably responsible for any negative change.
The erie eerie abandoned buildings of Gary are towering moments to statist political culture. Gary failed because people couldnt accept the inevitability of change and embrace it for the opportunities it offered. The city and region will never recover until they do.
In Flint Michigan they are demolishing entire sections of the city in an attempt to downsize it to a reasonable size.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/22/business/22flint.html?_r=1
The Forgotten Detroit site is quite amazing. I've seen it before.
Here is a similar site about Gary:
Indiana dunes near Gary is one of the most beautiful place I have ever seen.
Check out City-Data for a good source of data about Gary IN or any other town. Basically Gary has been in decline it seems for many years....
http://www.city-data.com/city/Gary-Indiana.html
“And please Freepers, dont think that Gary is really what Indiana is like. Were really a lot closer to Texans when it comes to rugged individualism and personal responsibility.”
Seems like to me, the first step to turn things around would be to petition the state Gov. to make Indiana “Right to work State”.
Jesse Jackson, Calypso Louie, Al Sharpton basically make near a million or more, each, plus their relations as being Black grievance hustlers.
By the way, Detroit has lost one third of its pension due to the collapse and insider investments. Taxes will have to be raised. I’m always curious how a declining population, wealth, pays for increased taxes.
Borrowing, of course, is always popular - junk bond issues.
But they also look to raise other taxes on non-residents.
For example; all residents of Cook County (Chicago) IL, get free health care at Cook County Hospital. No health insurance required. It is funded, at least in part, by huge sales taxes on hotel rooms and restaurant meals in Cook County, funded mainly by tourists.
So, I would look for increased taxes and fees at Detroit Metro Airport, the Casinos, the Auto Show, Sports Venues, and anyplace else they can think of. They could even turn some of their freeways into toll roads, if they haven't done that already.
Great post. Thanks.
The big difference between Texas and Indiana: Texas is a Right to Work state.
Does Gary still have the air pollution it used to be notorious for?
Also, where are the Jackson 5, lol?
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