For John, BLUF: Crime makes Cities less fun to live in and to visit, meaning the economies of cities with crime are impacted, badly. Nothing to see here; just move along.
Here is the sub-headline:
Rising violence may undercut New York’s efforts to rebuild its economy.
From City Journal, by Editor Steven Malanga, 19 January 2021.
Here is the lede plus one:
In the late 1980s, U.S. Athletics was a 13-store footwear chain bucking competition from big national retailers to carve a market for itself in New York City. It had the right styles at the right price and by the end of the decade was projecting $20 million in sales. What the chain lacked was a strategy to deal with New York’s exploding crime. In 1990, the company’s owner wrote to city officials complaining that its Manhattan stores had been held up at gunpoint 15 times in the past year, suffered 25 break-ins, and been victimized by 1,000 shoplifting incidents. He warned that he might have to shut down his city operations. It wasn’t an idle threat; the next year, U.S. Athletics closed its city retail operations.There is nothing to say. Either the local police forcer effectiverly suppressess crime, without suppressing the Citizens, or the city goes under. If the policer disrespect the citizens then quality of life goes down, and eventually the Citizens replace the local Government, by voting, one hopes.U.S. Athletics wasn’t alone. New York businesses during the late eighties and early nineties suffered hundreds of millions of dollars from pilferage and had to invest billions more in extra security to fend off crime. Many gave up, and the result was shopping districts dotted with boarded-up, empty stores, and industrial areas with vacant warehouses. Crime was another reason that a city with other competitive disadvantages—including high taxes and heavy business regulation—struggled to create jobs during that era.
Hat tip to the InstaPundit.
Regards — Cliff
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