Robert Bell
Whatever Happened to the “Magnet Cities?”
COVID19 has opened our eyes to a new possibility. Give people a choice of where to live – one that does not depend on where they make their living – and they vote with their feet for lower density, more green space and, most of all, for affordable costs. It has become clear that the celebrated “magnet cities” are threatened by their own success. They are dangerously overcrowded. They are vastly over-priced for all but the most over-paid. That’s why San Francisco and Manhattan have only half the number of children per household as the US metropolitan average, while suburbs and e
When it comes to Broadband, Millennials Vote with their Feet
[Commentary] If you just look at overall numbers, our population seems to be behaving just like they did in the industrial age – moving to cities where jobs and people are concentrated. Rural areas that lag in broadband connectivity and digital literacy will continue to suffer from these old trends. However, the digital age is young. Its full effects are still to be felt. Remember it took several decades for electricity or the automobile to revolutionize society.
Rural Population Grows in Counties with a Lower 'Digital Divide'
[Commentary] When they live in remote rural areas, millennials are more likely to reside in a county that has better digital access. The findings could indicate that the digital economy is helping decentralize the economy, not just clustering economic change in the cities that are already the largest. If you just look at overall numbers, our population seems to be behaving just like they did in the industrial age – moving to cities where jobs and people are concentrated. Rural areas that lag in broadband connectivity and digital literacy will continue to suffer from these old trends.