What does Detroit say about the working class in the US? City has lost over 25 percent of its population since 2000. People take scrap metal from old buildings to export to China.

One of the biggest examples of the US eroding its working class is through the example of Detroit.  The city of Detroit has lost a stunning 25 percent of its population between 2000 and 2010.  Poverty is rampant with 3 out of 5 kids living below the poverty line.  It is a startling revelation of what can happen to what was the fifth biggest city in the United States and now is merely a shell of itself.  There is a documentary, Detropia which grimly shows dilapidated buildings while many tear out scrap metal to sell on the open market.  You also hear from citizens trying to make sense of what is occurring.  What is stunning is the population of Detroit is now back to levels last seen in the first half of the 1900s.  A town built around big US automakers reflects what a country can look like when it loses a big part of its manufacturing base in pursuit of low wage capitalism.  The rust belt gives us a clearer perspective as to why we have 47 million Americans on food stamps while the stock market inches closer to record levels.

The shrinking city of Detroit

detroit

Detroit is a personification of what has happened to our working class.  What is startling is how little coverage is given to this issue.  One of the star cities of the US suddenly is a shell and the buildings reflect a bygone era.  Many buildings are stripped clean for scrap metal.  Ironically much of this scrap metal is exported to China.  From one busted economy to a fast booming one.  It also highlights a global trend.  Low wage capitalism creates a system where large income disparities exist.  There may appear to be little hope for many but this is the new system and the population of Detroit reflects this change:

population of detroit

What is interesting however, is that hiring is picking back up even in Detroit?  Why?  Because wages and benefits have been slashed to the bone.  We are now exporting lower wages and a lower standard of living back.  When you setup a debt based system addicted to squeezing out every last cent, you begin to chase gains all over the world.  Many companies have pursued this path.  After the big automaker bailouts, many new hires came in making half of what previous workers made and with stripped down benefits.  This has resulted in more hires:

nonfarm employees detroit

This upsurge in hiring is helpful but this is in a city where unemployment is at 20+ percent and underemployment is likely at 40+ percent.  There are plans on bulldozing down parts of the city to “right size” since the city no longer needs to be built out to accommodate nearly 2 million people.  The sense you get with Detroit is of ruins.  The ruins of a working class.

Now whether this is reversible in the short-term is debatable.  We are now driven largely by massive global completion and a severe addiction to debt.  The Fed is determined to erode the value of the dollar so that our debts become more manageable over time.  We continue to deficit spend and the long term consequences are now coming back to bite us.

Home prices in Detroit have picked up modestly since the trough of the recession:

home price index detroit

Real estate is incredibly cheap in Detroit for a variety of reasons.  At a certain point, prices get so low that it becomes attractive to buy.  The city has gone through some dramatic pain over the last few decades.  Things have picked up a bit recently but to reverse the erosion of the US standard of living, it will take more than a couple of good years.

The US used to have a more even income breakdown across states but that is no longer the case.  You have cities that are back up and booming like San Francisco with global demand while other areas like Detroit operate almost in a third world fashion.

RSSIf you enjoyed this post click here to subscribe to a complete feed and stay up to date with today’s challenging market!

If you enjoyed this post click here to subscribe to a complete feed and stay up to date with today’s challenging market!
TAGS: , ,




3 Comments on this post

Trackbacks

  1. Maria S Calef said:

    There are many Detroist now in US. Ghost towns thanks to NAFTA CAFTA and others treaties, signed to many countries where our big corporations flew to pay low salaries, not paying retirment plan, pensions, ss, not benefits at all. These criminals corporations are receiving bail out from the government, exempt to pay taxes, and after of all of that, they went to overseas. Corporations in foreing countries are killing the working class, the unions, and all the conquers benefits that workers are obtaning after struggle. Corporations exodus are a contributor factor of the wave of immigration in US. For Mexico as an example. NAFTA prohibe Mexican goverment to subsidize its farmers, while USA subsidize its farmer, so when US farmers dump their products in Mexican market, the Mexicans farmers cannot compite with the US prices. They become bankruptcy and so on.

    January 24th, 2013 at 8:58 pm
  2. Gary Reber said:

    This new reality is the result of technological innovation and invention, tectonic shifts in the technologies of production, and an obsolute union movement stuck in job creation and “more pay for less work” instead of bargaining for employee ownership. Result: no or significantly reduced opportunity for income.

    The solution is not a focus on JOB CREATION but a focus on OWNERSHIP CREATION. There is a solution. The Just Third Way Master Plan for America’s future is published at http://foreconomicjustice.org/?p=5797.

    The fundamental economic solution is to create income for EVERY American by simultaneously broadening private, individual ownership of FUTURE productive capital economic growth and fully paying the profit dividends to the new American owners of the income-producing capital assets of our corporations.

    Support the Capital Homestead Act at http://www.cesj.org/homestead/index.htm and http://www.cesj.org/homestead/summary-cha.htm

    January 26th, 2013 at 1:10 pm
  3. John said:

    I really enjoyed skimming Gery Rebar’s links. Basically, they’re describing a form of communism. The enjoyable part is how hard the writer tried to say it’s not socialism or capitalism but a third way. He’s trying to avoid the “s” word or the “c” word, but that’s what it is. When capital is distribute equitably, it’s communism.

    I won’t deny. Stalin was horrible. Mao was horrible. They did it wrong. But Castro wasn’t *that* horrible compared. And half of Europe has been socialist at one time or other, and it’s been OK there.

    What’s happened in Detroit is basic capitalism. Capital moved – the factories moved – and everything collapsed. That demonstrates the power of capital, rather than the power of labor, or the power of government. This is a capitalist city, and that was made self-evident when capital left, and the city has eroded. Most cities in the United States are like this.

    January 28th, 2013 at 10:48 pm

LEAVE A COMMENT

Subscribe Form

Subscribe to Blog

Categories

Archives