top | item 17747885

(no title)

ebbv | 7 years ago

So what's the solution? If a big company opens a factory in an area, then the hire a bunch of people at that factory, people obviously want to move closer to where work is. It's not like those people can then say "Hey we need another company to open a factory here just in case." Even if there are other jobs created in the town, the loss of hundreds (or thousands) of jobs is always going to be devastating anywhere outside of a big city.

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.

discuss

order

freddie_mercury|7 years ago

> So what's the solution? [...] the loss of hundreds (or thousands) of jobs is always going to be devastating anywhere outside of a big city.

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

Or don't buy a house where there isn't a diverse portfolio of companies around.

Because moving from one rental to another is not that hard.

close04|7 years ago

Actually the solution was already tried and tested by American cities. It's called diversifying the economic base. Instead of relying on 1 mammoth company, try to develop and sustain multiple smaller ones.

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

A city doesn't have to be big to be diverse. It just has to be "not a mining town" or "not dominated by a single industry".

ummonk|7 years ago

The problem is that the cities with thriving job markets tend to also have high housing costs.

EZ-E|7 years ago

> So what's the solution?

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

Some part of the solution could be with city planning government officials. They could work to lure other different or complementary industries to their city/area. If the base labor skill set is similar but the parent companies are different enough, a downturn in one doesn't mean the city turns into a ghost-town.

doombolt|7 years ago

I don't think we will see any industries with mass employment, and in eithet case, there's no reason why it won't be based near the largest cities. The prospect for remote areas is grim, and that includes even large-ish cities. Even if they are afloat you won't see much investment.

alkonaut|7 years ago

> If a big company opens a factory in an area, then the hire a bunch of people at that factory, people obviously want to move closer to where work is.

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.