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The Atlantic - The Middletown Story |
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Kelly
MUSA Immigrant Joined: Aug 20 2009 Status: Offline Points: 47 |
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Posted: Sep 08 2013 at 7:51am |
Why Local Money Matters: The Middletown StoryBy James FallowsThe two big lessons my wife and I keep encountering in our travels are these: First, the profound economic and and cultural effect of immigration even in places where you might not necessarily expect that. For instance, the Somali, Sudanese, Nepalese, Bhutanese, etc presence in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, that my wife described yesterday. And second, the importance of locally based money and corporations in making some cities very different from others that merely have branch-office status. That was the theme of this report from Holland, Michigan, and this one from Rapid City, South Dakota -- the latter about an Indian / Congolese / South Dakotan family that converted a franchise Radisson into an eco-hotel that mainly bought from local suppliers. Here is a report from a reader named Dennis Foley, who now lives in Holland but grew up in a similar manufacturing-centered small Midwestern town. That was Middletown, whose big local industry there was Armco steel, now AK Steel. Foley describes the difference Armco made, and what that means in today's corporate environment. I turn it over to him:
The point the message ends on is the challenging one: whether there is any way to recreate the beneficial effects of local ownership (which also has its drawbacks), in the globalized-capitalism age. Two other closing items before we shift to Sioux Falls. First, the effect Dennis Foley describes about Middletown -- that Armco execs had to breathe the same air as everyone else -- is a major force for environmental action in China. No matter how rich or powerful, no one can escape the air. Second, why the stock certificate at the top? When I was a kid, my fervent Republican small-businessman Uncle Joe gave me as a birthday present a few shares of Armco stock, worth maybe $50, to whet my interest in American business. Mainly I remember the beautiful engraved stock certificates, which I still have somewhere. This partial image from Scripophily. I have also put up a companion posting, with maps, on our Esri-geoblog site. This article available online at: http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/09/why-local-money-matters-the-middletown-story/279443/ Copyright © 2013 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All Rights Reserved.
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