Monday, February 23, 2015

Best-Performing Cities of 2014

http://www.citylab.com/work/2015/01/americas-best-performing-cities-in2014/384336/




The Golden Gate Bridge
San Francisco, California
govexec.com
Hello Everyone:

We are already into 2015 but it is still not too late to look back at America's best performing cities in 2014.  To help us with deciphering which cities performed best and why is Richard Florida and hist article "America's Best Performing Cities in 2014."  Mr. Florida tell us, "The Economist reported this month that 2014's third quarter saw a 5 percent GDP growth, the fastest pace since 2003." However, at the risk of stating the obvious, recovery has been disproportionately uneven, benefitting the affluent while the working and middle class fall further behind.  Recovery has been disproportionately felt throughout cities and metropolitan areas, the real engines of economic growth.  Proof of this phenomenon is found in the Milken Institute's Best-Performing Cities 2014 (http://www.milkeninstitute.org/publications/view/682), released on January 8, 2015.  This is an "...outcome-based rankings, the study rates some 200 large and 179 small metro on several key measures: job-growth, wage and salary growth and the size and concentration of high tech industry." The study also revealed that the recovery has been centered on "...the twin pillars of America's knowledge/energy economy with the best performers being energy centers and tech hubs."

Top 25 best-performing cities
citylab.com

At the top of the list of best-performing cities is San Francisco, which improved on its number three standing in 2013.  What this tells us is that the "City by the Bay's" rise to the top is another indication of its ongoing move toward urban tech.  Mr. Florida observes, "...this is the first time that San Francisco has topped the list in its 15-year history, outdistancing Austin, last year's top performer (now number two), and San Jose, in the heart of Silicon Valley (fourth place)." In an email to Mr. Florida, study author Ross DeVol wrote,

From 2008 to 2013, professional, scientific, and technical services created 25,500 jobs in San Francisco-45 percent of total job creation over that period!  The median wage for these professions was $91,400." (Ibid)

To give you an indication how Technology-based professions played such a key role in city performance, the top six finishers were all tech hubs: the afore mentioned, Provo, Utah; Raleigh-Cary in North Carolina's Research  Triangle; and Salt Lake City.  The remaining top ten were four Texas cities: Houston, Fort Worth, Dallas, and San Antonio.  Seattle came in at number eleven and Boulder, Colorado was number thirteen.

Energy centers also ranked high on the list.  The evidence is strongest in the metropolitan ares in Texas, home to seven of the top twenty-five best performing metropolitans.  The energy economies of Lafayette and Baton Rouge, Louisiana also found their way into the top twenty-five-Baton Rouge had the biggest jump, fifty-five places to number 21.

"Rust Belt Rising"
theheadandthehead.com
 However, all the news is rosy.  The majority of the "Rustbelt" metropolitans continued to underperform.  The city of Detroit, Michigan dropped twenty-six points to 193rd; Akron, Ohio landed at 152; Toledo, Ohio is ranked 151, Cleveland, Ohio is 133.  There are some rays of sunshine amid this gloom in form of the post-industrial economies like Indianapolis (26) and Columbus, Ohio (41).  Midwestern college towns: Madison, Wisconsin (30); Ann Arbor (59) and Grand Rapids, Michigan (25) also did well.

The Sunbelt metropolitans, once infamous capitals of sprawl and housing "growth without growth." continued lag behind: Phoenix, Arizona (65) and Las Vegas, Nevada (144).  The three largest metropolitans did not fare too well: New York (62), Los Angeles (42), and Chicago (97).  The greater Washington D.C. area, which did well during the recession, fell from 45th in 2013 to 84th in 2014.







Top ten best-performing small cities
citylab.com
The Milken Institute study also ranked the best-performing smaller metropolitans.  Not at all surprising, they reflect "...the contours of America's knowledge-energy economy." Fargo, North Dakota-Minnesota, which benefitted from fracking activity, landed in first place.  Energy is also the primary economic engine in Victoria, Texas (3); Bismarck, North Dakota (4), and Midland, Texas (6).  The report also made note of the fact that "...many of the top-performing small metros have economies that revolve around the horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing sectors. Therefore, growth in the energy sector also facilitated "...demand for infrastructure investment, construction and transportation..." engendering further economic development.  College towns and knowledge hubs like Iowa City, Iowa (5); Morgantown, West Virginia (7); College Station, Texas (8); and Auburn, Alabama (10) rounded out the top ten.

Biggest gainers among large MSAs
citylab.com
There were also metropolitan areas that the greatest gains in the best-performing cities rankings.  Richard Florida writes, "The good  is that a number of once-struggling Sunbelt and Rustbelt metros have seen some improvement."  The biggest gainers and rebounders were the vacation and second home destination cities: West Palm-Beach-Boca Raton-Boyton Beach which jumped up ninety-three places since 2013.  The biggest gainers in the large metropolitan were: Miami, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Cincinnati, and Orlando all ranked among the top twenty-five gainers.








Biggest decliners among large MSAs
citylab.com
Just as there are cities that made big improvements in their standing among the best-performing cities, there are metropolitan areas that made the biggest declines.  Mr. Florida observes, "More troublingly, the metros that registered the biggest declines...underscore the continued hollowing of the heartland alongside parts of the Sunbelt."  Peoria, Illinois had the dubious distinction of scoring the biggest annual decline, a change of -102.  Peoria was followed by Erie (2) and York Pennsylvania (3); Roanoke, Virginia (4); Hartford, Connecticut (5), and big surprise Bethesda, Maryland (6).  The Pennsylvania metropolitan areas fared particularly poorly, with five logging in major declines, including Pittsburgh (79, -48 from 2013).  Citing the report,

To some extent , longer-term subpar growth trends are reemerging, after having been masked during the Great Recession.  Most of these metros have more service-based economies that didn't experience as severe a decline as many with with a greater reliance on manufacturing. (Ibid)

Cover of 2014 Best-Performing Cities
bizneworleans.com
The Milken rankings can be used to measure the key components that are at the base of American metropolitan growth.  To understand how this works, Charlotta Mellander of the Martin Prosperity Institute conducted a basic correlation analysis on the 2014 Milken  rankings for the 200 large metropolitans they analyzed.  Ms. Mellander paired the data supplied by Milken Institute to key factor such as: "...population, density, human capital (percentage of college graduates), the share of knowledge, professional, and creative workers."  As always correlation does not imply causation, they present a relationship between variables.

Richard Florida writes, "Economist have increasingly argued that talent and human capital are key drivers of regional economic performance.  And Milken's rankings show a reasonably close association with the share of adults that are college grads (.32) and the share of the labor force made up of knowledge, professional, and creative workers (.23)."  More interesting, the Milken Index is closely aligned with arts and cultural talents (.35) than science and technology workers (.30) and business professional (.24).  Mr. Florida continues, "And for all the talk of how 'eds and meds' can help spur development, the Milken Index is negatively associated with 'eds and meds' occupations (-.17).  This reflects what the venture capitalist Fred Wilson told me in an interview a while back: He sees tech startups shifting from their previous engineering and hardware orientation to a broader, more urban focus, where entrepreneurs have characteristics that more similar to artists."

Map of America's Best Performing Cities 2014
builderonline.com
Another characteristic of the best performing cities is openness and diversity.  Mr. Florida writes, "The Milken Index is positively associated with both the share of population that is foreign born (.26) and even more closely with the share that is gay and lesbian (.42)."  Another feature of best performing cities is they are larger (.22) and denser (.26).  The commute to and from work also matters.  Mr. Florida adds, "The Milken Index is negatively associated with the share of commuters who drive to work alone (-.31) and positively with the share of take public transit to work (.26)."

The results tell us about "the connection between clustered and concentrated tech-driven economies and inequality..."  This may sound odd to some of you but the Milken Index revealed that metropolitans that fare better have higher levels of inequality (a .28 correlation; down from .34 in 2013).  One point to pay attention to is the Milken Index inequality measure is not statistically associated with income inequality measured by the Gini coefficient.  What is particularly worrisome to Mr. Florida and others is the increasing cost of housing threatening the flourishing creative centers.  Charlotta Mellander's study concluded that there was no "statistical association between the Milken Index and the share of income devoted to housing."  Richard Florida does concede that housing affordability is very much a serious problem in cities such as San Francisco and New York, the upside is that this not the universal situation for high-performing cities and metropolitans.

The takeaway from the Milken Index is that it presents a better picture of "...America's geographically uneven recovery, where tech hub and energy centers prosper while older manufacturing and construction driven metros continue to falter."  However, before you start looking at housing and employment opportunities in San Francisco be forewarned that there are dark clouds looming in the horizon.  "Falling energy prices will likely put a damper on growth in many energy-driven metros.  And leading urban tech centers like San Francisco are faced with rising housing prices and mounting inequality which threaten to price out some of the very people who have driven innovation there in the first place."  To find out how these factors will affect cities and metropolitans, we will have to wait for the 2015 rankings.  

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