(no title)
ebbv | 7 years ago
It's easy to say "Oh well those people shouldn't have bet everything on that factory." but that's not realistic or providing any kind of solution.
ebbv | 7 years ago
It's easy to say "Oh well those people shouldn't have bet everything on that factory." but that's not realistic or providing any kind of solution.
freddie_mercury|7 years ago
It seems like the seeds of the solution are contained in your own post: don't live anywhere but a big city. Or, if you do, realise that you are making a risky bet with your entire family at stake.
carlmr|7 years ago
Because moving from one rental to another is not that hard.
close04|7 years ago
All American cities that recovered from the '70s-'80s downturn, and even from the 2008 crisis were the ones with a higher number of smaller employers, startups, etc. The ones that diversified. Because they are more resilient to one company's failure.
alkonaut|7 years ago
ummonk|7 years ago
CaptainZapp|7 years ago
Reinventing itself?
That's essentially what the German "rust belt" (Ruhrgebiet) attempted to do (partially quite successfully) in the last couple decades.[1]
[1] https://theconversation.com/redesigning-the-rust-belt-an-old...
EZ-E|7 years ago
Some towns adapt after a while. For example Lille and its neighboring towns in France. It used to be big in textile/coal industry.
Many old abandoned factories got converted into modern offices for startups, into stores etc... One example (scroll down for pictures) : https://www.usineroubaix.fr/fr/
matt_s|7 years ago
doombolt|7 years ago
alkonaut|7 years ago
I'd be very very very hesitant to move to such a town for work. Granted, when you are unemployed you may not have a choice, but I'd definitely settle for a much worse job/worse pay in a non-mono-industry town.