While there were many factors that triggered the widespread
financial crisis of 2008-2010, at least one may have been
increasing inequality in the United States economy. With the
distributional divide wider than at any time since the Great
Depression, the wealthy poured money into increasingly speculative
investments even as those at the bottom of the income distribution
borrowed just to stay above water.
Long before the national meltdown helped to make this point, the
notion that inequality might actually damage economic growth was
gaining ground at another geographic level: that of the
metropolitan region. Throughout the US, many key metropolitan
actors, including collaboratives of business, civic and community
leaders, have accepted the notion that a more inclusive economic
approach could actually shore up the social consensus and human
capital needed to compete in a global economy.
So what are the possibilities for this "Just Growth"? This book
seeks to address this and other key questions with a combination of
quantitative and qualitative analysis. Utilizing a sample of the
largest 192 metropolitan regions in the United States, the authors
use a quantitative approach to identify those regions with above
average performance in terms of economic growth and social equity
indicators, and conduct regression-style analysis to explore the
demographic, political and economic determinants behind the
phenomenon.
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