Parker County Blog

Texans expressing opinions about issues that are relative to Parker County and beyond.
  • About
  • Blogging Policy

It’s Clear ‘White Flight’ to Suburbs Isn’t Reason Cities Struggle

By parkercountyblog on April 18, 2018

  Walter E. Williams / @WE_Williams / April 18, 2018 /

AbandonedHouses-1250x650.jpg

Detroit, where these abandoned homes are located, went from a population of nearly 1.8 million in 1950 to about 673,000 today. (Photo: Patrick Gorski/ZUMA Press/Newscom)


When World War II ended, Washington, D.C.’s population was about 900,000; today it’s about 700,000. In 1950, Baltimore’s population was almost 950,000; today it’s around 614,000. Detroit’s 1950 population was close to 1.85 million; today it’s down to 673,000. Camden, New Jersey’s 1950 population was nearly 125,000; today it has fallen to 77,000. St. Louis’ 1950 population was more than 856,000; today it’s less than 309,000.

A similar story of population decline can be found in most of our formerly large and prosperous cities. In some cities, population declines since 1950 are well over 50 percent. In addition to Detroit and St. Louis, those would include Cleveland and Pittsburgh.

During the 1960s and ’70s, academic liberals, civil rights advocates, and others blamed the exodus on racism—”white flight” to the suburbs. However, since the ’70s, blacks have been fleeing some cities at higher rates than whites.

It turns out that blacks, like whites, want better and safer schools for their kids and don’t like to be mugged or have their property vandalized. Just like white people, if they have the means, black people can’t wait for moving companies to move them out.

At the heart of big-city exoduses is a process that I call accumulative decay. When schools are rotten and unsafe, neighborhoods become run-down and unsafe, and city services decline, the first people to leave are those who care the most about good schools and neighborhood amenities and have the resources to move. As a result, cities lose their best and ablest people first.

Those who leave the city for greener pastures tend to be replaced by people who don’t care so much about schools and neighborhood amenities or people who do care but don’t have the means to move anywhere else. Because the “best” people—those who put more into the city’s coffer than they take out in services—leave, politicians must raise taxes and/or permit city services to deteriorate. This sets up the conditions for the next round of people who can do better to leave. Businesses—which depend on these people, either as employees or as customers—also begin to leave.

The typical political response to a declining tax base is to raise taxes even more and hence create incentives for more businesses and residents to leave. Of course, there’s also mayoral begging for federal and state bailouts. Once started, there is little to stop the city’s downward spiral.

Intelligent mayors could prevent, halt, and perhaps reverse their city decline by paying more attention to efficiency than equity. That might be politically difficult.

Regardless of any other goal, mayors must recognize that their first order of business is to retain what economists call net positive fiscal residue. That’s a fancy term for keeping those people in the city who put more into the city’s coffers, in the form of taxes, than they take out in services.

To do that might require discrimination in the provision of city services—e.g., providing better street lighting, greater safety, nicer libraries, better schools, and other amenities in more affluent neighborhoods.

As one example, many middle-class families leave cities because of poor school quality. Mayors and others who care about the viability of a city should support school vouchers. That way, parents who stay—and put a high premium on the education of their children—wouldn’t be faced with paying twice in order for their kids to get a good education, through property taxes and private school tuition.

Some might protest that city service discrimination is unfair. I might agree, but it’s even more unfair for cities, once the magnets of opportunities for low-income people, to become economic wastelands.

Big cities can be revitalized, but it’s going to take mayors with guts to do what’s necessary to reverse accumulative decay. They must ensure safe streets and safe schools. They must crack down on not only violent crimes but also petty crimes and misdemeanors, such as public urination, graffiti, vandalism, loitering, and panhandling.

###

Commentary By

Portrait of Walter E. Williams

Walter E. Williams @WE_Williams

Walter E. Williams is a columnist for The Daily Signal and a professor of economics at George Mason University.

 

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Posted in: National Issues

Post navigation

← Older
Newer →

Archives

Categories

  • About
  • Armed Citizens
  • City of Weatherford
    • City/County Animal Shelter
  • Conservative Report Card
  • Conservative University
  • National Issues
  • Parker County Churches
  • Parker County Issues
    • Sheriff's Department
  • Senator Blutarsky
  • State Representative Phil King, District 61
  • State Senator Craig Estes, Senate District 30
  • Texas Issues
  • The Parker County Tea Party
  • Thomas Paine
  • Tyrants, Tempests & Despots
  • Voice of Reason

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Blogroll

  • Charters of Freedom
  • Heritage Action for America
  • Project Vote Smart
  • RealClearPolitics
  • Texas House of Representatives – Live Broadcasts
  • The Heritage Foundation
  • The Western Wall Heritage Foundation
  • U. S. Debt Clock (Source: Congressional Budget Office)

Parker County Schools -

  • Aledo Independent School District
  • Azle Independent School District
  • Brock Independent School District
  • Garner Independent School District
  • Millsap Independent School District
  • Peaster Independent School District
  • Springtown Independent School District
  • Weatherford Independent School District
  • WISD Budget
  • WISD Check Registers

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • Parker County Blog
    • Join 177 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Parker County Blog
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Copy shortlink
    • Report this content
    • View post in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d bloggers like this: