This is a concept in development, so I'm going to open this post up to comments. Global cities are like that famous quip on obscenity: we know one when we see it. But the definitions of global cities are incredibly varied and there doesn't seem to be a consensus or well-defined way to think about. I looked at the criteria used in various prominent studies back in 2012 and found them highly divergent. Only the Sassen based one appeared to have a robust definition and theoretical basis, but it's a pretty narrow definition. While it's very … [Read more...]
Archives for December 2014
Why the Rent Is Too High, Reason #239
It's no secret housing costs are high and going higher in major US cities like NYC, San Francisco, etc. I was just tweeting with someone this week who moved back from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Indianapolis because her rent was being raised by over 50% (possibly that's a cumulative increase over time - not sure). Most of the urbanist discussion tends to focus around zoning as the reason prices are high. That's certainly an important factor. But there are also other things driving up costs and rents. The NYT highlighted one of them last Sunday, … [Read more...]
Talking Tuition With Mitch Daniels
This summer I sat down with Purdue University President Mitch Daniels to talk about his tuition freeze initative there for my City Journal article on the subject. Here's the podcast of that conversation. If the embed doesn't display for you, click over to listen on Soundcloud. Here are some excerpted highlights. Daniels on what's driving costs up: Government has imposed a whole lot of this administrative cost on the colleges. Not all of it, but a lot of it. You know, administrative costs have soared in banks, too. And so there’s some … [Read more...]
London’s Global City Royal Flush
A recent article in the Economist about the Rosetta space probe reminded me again of the uniqueness of London on the global stage. The piece notes: In a clean room at the Airbus Defence & Space (ADS) factory north of London, scientists are working on LISA Pathfinder (pictured), a hexagon-shaped satellite due to be launched next year. The aim of the ambitious space mission is to try, for the first time, to find and measure gravitational waves–ripples in space-time predicted by Einstein’s general theory of relativity. ... About one-quarter … [Read more...]
The Three Ages of Boss Rule
[ Steve Eide is a Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute and also runs its fiscal policy oriented web site Public Sector, Inc.. After seeing Pete Saunders' piece on the three generations of black mayors in America, he sent me the piece below with the same three generations structure, but talking about political boss rule, using Hollywood as a point of departure. It's a great piece I'm delighted to get to share - Aaron. ] Between roughly the Civil War and World War II, most American cities were at some point dominated by a boss and his … [Read more...]