Synopses & Reviews
Forget everything you think you know about the direction of the American economy, about our growing need for foreign oil, about the rise of the service economy and the decline of American manufacturing. The story of the next thirty years will not be a repeat of the last thirty.”
One of the most respected voices on Wall Street, Meredith Whitney shot to global prominence in 2007 when her warnings of a looming crisis in the financial sector proved all too prescient. Now, in her first book, she expands upon her biggest call since the financial crisis.
Whitney points out that it wasnt just consumers who binged on debt for the past twenty years but state and local governments too. She explains how the fiscal sins of the past are beginning to transform the U.S. economy along regional lines. And she shows how we are moving into a new era in which wealth, power, and opportunity flow away from the coasts and toward the central corridor.
The housing boom was initially great for states such as California, Nevada, and Florida. State and municipal coffers overflowed, unemployment shrank, and local governments spent their tax-revenue windfalls on pay hikes and pension increases for their public employees. But when the boom dried up in those parts of the country, so too did the tax revenues, forcing tax-rate hikes and cuts to essential public servicesespecially education and infrastructure.
In contrast to those doom and gloom headlines, a much different trend was developing in interior states such as North Dakota, Indiana, and Texas. They survived the housing crisis relatively unscathed, avoiding mass foreclosures and budgetary chaos. As a result theyve had the money to retrain workers and offer tax incentives to companies willing to relocate. Coupled with the recent booms in natural gas and oil extraction and a resurgence in manufacturing, these states are poised to become the new powerhouses of the American economy.
Whitney offers a sobering vision of the next few decades, with the coastal states continuing to struggle while the central corridor continues to thrive. She explores the consequences of roughly half the country stuck in a vicious cycle of decline while the other half enjoys a virtuous circle of growth.
Whitney also offers practical ideas to help the struggling parts of the countrybefore the fate of the states becomes irreversible.
Synopsis
A bold look at the most important new trend for our economy
Wall Street analyst Meredith Whitney became a household name when she predicted the subprime mortgage crisis a year before it fully erupted. Now she shows how were moving into a new era in which wealth, power, and opportunity flow away from the coasts toward the interior of the country.
The housing boom was initially great for states like California, Nevada, and Florida. But when the boom ended, so did the excess tax revenue sustaining many profligate state and local governments. Theyve been forced to raise taxes and cut essential public servicesespecially education and infrastructure. Extreme cases led to bankruptcy filings in nearly a dozen cities.
But meanwhile, in contrast to those doom and gloom headlines, a very different trend was developing in interior states like North Dakota, Indiana, and Texas. They survived the housing crisis relatively unscathed and therefore had the money to retrain workers and offer tax incentives to companies willing to relocate. Coupled with the recent booms in natural gas and oil extraction and the resurgence in manufacturing, these states are poised to become the new powerhouses of the American economy.
Whitney explores the long-term consequences of having roughly half the country in a vicious cycle of decline while the other half enjoys a virtuous circle of growth. And she offers practical ideas to help the struggling parts of Americabefore the fate of the states becomes irreversible.
About the Author
MEREDITH WHITNEY is the CEO of the investment firm Meredith Whitney Advisory Group, LLC. Before founding her company in 2009, she was a managing director and a senior analyst for Oppenheimer and Co., where she attracted national attention for her predictions about housing prices, the mortgage industry, and the coming financial crisis. She was on Fortunes list of the fifty most powerful women in business for four consecutive years, from 20082011, and was named in 2009 to Times list of the one hundred most influential people in the world. She and her husband live in New York City and Bermuda.