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    Derek Hyra

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    Economic Globalization and the WorldCities Hypothesis: The Global/Local Distinction*

    Draft Version

    January 11, 2005

    Do not cite without authors permission

    Paper Submitted for Presentation at the American Sociological Associations

    100th Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, August 13-16, 2005

    Please send correspondence to:

    Derek S. Hyra

    102 Gainsborough Street, Apt. 107E

    Boston, MA 02115Email: [email protected]

    Phone: (617) 859-5927

    Key Words: World Cities, Economic Globalization, Inner-City Development, Ethnography

    * I acknowledge Allison Deschamps, David Kirk, Saskia Sassen, Richard Taub and Carmi Schooler, whosecomments and feedback improved this paper. In addition, I thank the Rockefeller Foundation, the Social ScienceResearch Councils Program in Applied Economics, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the

    Center for the Study of Race, Politics and Culture and the Joint Center for Poverty Research for supporting this

    research.

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    Abstract

    Economic globalization and its impact on inner city development is a debated topic. A certaincamp of scholars declares processes stemming from the global economy are the primary driversof the changing urban geography in world cities. However, another academic faction maintains,

    that despite increasing international economic transactions, local city policies remain central toredeveloping inner city areas. This chapter attempts to bring greater clarity to the global/localdebate. Through exploring the economic revitalization of Harlem in New York City andBronzeville in Chicago, historic transitioning African-American neighborhoods, thisinvestigation highlights the association between downtown growth and adjacent neighborhoodgentrification. As the central business districts (CBD) of NYC and Chicago grow, Harlem andBronzeville are green-lined, as banks pour capital into these areas due to increased marketdemand. Using the world cities hypothesis as a theoretical guide, I demonstrate that an increasedimportance of locating in the CDB, due to the global economy, is related to downtowncentralization and subsequent inner city development. However, I also show that local politicalaction, such as tax incentives continue to be important. Thus, I argue that global and local forces

    interact to produce centralization and neighborhood gentrification. This study supports thenotion that the geography of the inner city is shaped by the complex interplay between abstractglobal dynamics and more tangible local political decisions.

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    Economic Globalization and the World

    Cities Hypothesis: The Global/Local Distinction

    One Saturday, I head out to a coffee shop to study. I stop at a brand new Starbucks on

    the Near North Side of Chicago. Unlike most Starbucks that are in middle-class communities,

    this one is located right across the street from Cabrini Green, an infamous public housing project.

    The large windows of the coffee shop face out upon two, 16-story, grayish, concrete public

    housing high-rises. As I begin to read, I notice that there are groups of white people sitting

    around tables holding strategic business meetings in the coffee shop. They all have PDAs (palm

    pilots), laptop computers, and cell phones. One group works on marketing strategies while

    another focuses on real estate transactions. They are, in a sense, the workers of the information

    age and the global economy. As I turn back around to look at the high-rises, I cannot help but

    think that the high-wage service employees of the global economy inside the shop and the lives

    of the Cabrini Green residents, mostly low-income African-Americans, are connected. The

    influx of the high-wage workers, who probably live in the new $400,000 town homes that are

    being constructed next to public housing projects, is related to the plan to remove all the high-

    rise projects in Chicago. As I sit in Starbucks and watch the business consultants, the

    simultaneous demolition of the public housing and the construction of $400,000 town homes in

    their place, I realize the international economy is influencing the redevelopment of poor urban

    communities.

    In the last several decades, we have witnessed the emergence of an international

    economy. This worldwide economy arises out of three interrelated circumstances: the opening

    up of international financial markets, an increase in foreign direct investment (DFI), and the

    expansion of multinational corporations. In the 1970s many foreign stock markets open

    themselves up to international capital. Individuals and institutions, described by Friedman

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    (2000) as the electronic herd, today literally invest 24 hours a day by placing their money in

    international money markets. As electronic transactions occur all over the world, investors make

    direct capital investments in foreign countries by financing the development of manufacturing

    plants and other production related infrastructure. A United Nations report indicates that the

    worlds stock of foreign direct investment skyrocketed from $213 billion to $4.1 trillion between

    1972 and 1998 (cited in Sassen [1991] 2001: 38). The DFIs set the stage for the proliferation of

    multinational companies. Multinational, U.S. based corporations such as Nike, Wal-Mart,

    Disney, General Motors, IBM, Intel and Cisco, manufacture and assemble their products all over

    the world in order to achieve the lowest production costs (Friedman 2000). In 1970 there were

    approximately 7,000 transnational corporations; today that number reaches nearly 60,000 with

    800,000 subsidiaries scattered throughout the world (Ranney 2003: 64). The magnitude of these

    investments leads to increased interdependency among national economies. Today, more than

    ever, national economies all over the world are linked. For instance, economic events in Mexico

    and Argentina or Thailand and Japan can have a direct and rapid effect on the United States,

    since U.S. funds and direct investments are spread throughout these countries.1 Forces stemming

    from this global economic system affect inner city areas in the United States.

    Although there is a distinct lines of scholarship concerning the relationship between

    economic globalization and inner city gentrification and development (e.g., Sassen 2000), most

    non-academics have a nebulous understanding of economic globalization. For example, Robert

    Rubin, the Secretary of Commerce under President Bill Clinton states, For most Americans, the

    global economy remains an abstraction, with little meaning in their daily lives (Rubin and

    Weisberg 2003: 15). While I was investigating the revitalization of Harlem in New York City

    1 Some argue that one of the largest single day point drops in the U.S. stock market in October of 1997 is associatedwith the East Asian financial crisis (Rubin and Weisberg 2003).

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    and Bronzeville in Chicago, historic African-American communities embedded in two global

    cities, no one mentions that their neighborhood is changing because of economic globalization.

    Further, few posit that the international context is important in their daily experience. Most point

    out more tangible and concrete forces such as national legislation, city policies, the

    encroachment of chain stores, the development of high priced condos and the influx of the black

    middle-class. As I will show, these tangle events and actions relate to globalization.

    While international forces can play a large role in determining urban geography, several

    authors note the importance of understanding how local actions mediate the development of

    global structures and processes (Abu-Lughod 1999; Beauregard 1995; Swyngedouw 1997).

    Swyngedouw (1997) expresses the complex, reciprocal nature of local and global dynamics

    for he posits that local actions shape global money flows, while global processes, in turn, affect

    local actions (137). For example, processes originating at the global level might sway

    multinational companies to locate in or around large cities. However, a local municipality may

    foster the emergence of global processes by giving tax breaks that allow multinational firms low-

    cost access to the central business district (CBD). Further, a city could use local or federal funds

    to subsidize the development of high priced condominiums to alleviate the housing demand

    created by the movement of multinational companies. These local actions, in turn, might

    promote increased land value and facilitate gentrification. Beauregard (1995) states, To speak

    of a relatively autonomous local level impacted by global forces is to skirt a number of important

    theoretical considerations (241). A deeper understanding of the nexus between global and local

    forces helps conceptualize and formulate more precise theories about economic globalization and

    its connection with emergent conditions in inner city areas.

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    This chapter attempts to bring more clarity to the global/local debate. For instance, to

    what extent are global dynamics altering the conditions and configurations of urban poverty?

    More importantly, how do distinct political contexts mediate broader processes of economic

    development stemming from the global or national level? Using the world cities hypothesis2

    as a theoretical framework, I explore whether global structures and processes directly and/or

    indirectly affect community development. I investigate the extent to which global structures and

    related local actions concerning centrality in New York City and Chicago result in the

    gentrification of Harlem and Bronzeville.

    I argue that processes originating at the global level interact with local actions to

    stimulate market investment and neighborhood gentrification. Both cities are experiencing

    downtown centralization, which I argue is directly tied to the global economy. However, local

    mechanisms, such as city housing initiatives and business incentives, help to reduce investment

    risk and stimulate capital flows into adjacent communities. The local economic and political

    landscapes of Chicago and New York City mediate and reconstitute the forces of globalization

    upon Bronzeville and Harlem. Based on these circumstances, I argue that, while global

    processes have become more important, so too has the mediating effects of local city structures:

    highlighting the paradox that as the world becomes ever more global, local economic and

    political circumstances are increasingly central.

    Inner Cities and the World Cities Hypothesis

    The international economy facilitates two interconnected processes, deindustrialization

    and centralization, which impact conditions in inner city areas. Deindustrialization, the process

    by which companies close factories in the U.S. and transfer manufacturing to developing

    2Also known as the global cities thesis.

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    countries where labor costs are cheaper, contributes to the downward spiral experienced by inner

    city ghettos in the 1960s, 70s and 80s (Wilson 1996). With less manufacturing jobs in U.S.

    cities, unemployment and poverty skyrocket in many African-American urban communities.

    Although other forces such as institutional racism (Massey and Denton 1993) and African-

    American middle class flight to the suburbs are important factors, deindustrialization is central.

    Wilson (1999) states, Despite African Americans strong focus on the effects of racial

    discrimination in domestic U.S. employment, their economic fate is inextricably connected with

    the structure and function of a much broader, globally influenced modern economy (45).

    In the 1990s the related process of centralization begins to affect certain inner city areas

    but in the exact opposite manner. While in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, many Northern and

    Midwest urban areas lost firms and population, in the 1990s certain U.S. cities, especially ones

    considered important to the function of the global economy, experience centralization, defined as

    population and employment resurgence. This population influx, particularly in the central

    business district (CBD), has consequences for the real estate values in adjacent inner city

    neighborhoods. As the CBD prospers and expands, economically abandoned neighborhoods

    experience commercial and residential investments, threatening to displace low-income

    residents.

    The world cities hypothesis, as articulated by Saskia Sassen, provides a useful

    theoretical lens to investigate global phenomena, particularly the relationships among

    deindustrialization, centralization and neighborhood gentrification. An important component of

    the world cities hypothesis is the notion that the decentralized manufacturing process is coupled

    with a new geography of centrality (Sassen [1991] 2001: 123). The world cities hypothesis

    claims that a set of world cities are the command and control centers of the international

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    economy.3 The decentralization of manufacturing creates the need for transnational firms to

    locate in strategic places to finance, coordinate, and manage their global activities. Large

    companies that manufacture and assemble products in different countries, spanning several

    continents, need a centralized space for global coordination. Fainstein ([1994] 2001: 33)

    explains that when large multinational firms expand and merge globally, lawyers, investment

    bankers, insurers and marketing specialists and others are needed to accomplish these deals.

    These transactions usually occur within a global city, even if the firms are headquartered in other

    areas. Thus, the central business districts of global cities are flooded with high-wage jobs in

    fields such as law, advertising, finance, and accounting, which in a post-Fordist era of production

    help multinational companies perform global coordination and mergers. In addition, smaller

    service-based companies that bid for contracts to perform the outsourced work of the large

    transnational firms flock to the central city. Thus, global cities, based on their function as the

    managers of the international economy, experience employment and population growth in

    service sector occupations (Sassen 1994).

    The new centrality, based on command and control functions, has two important

    consequences for world cities: rising income inequality and neighborhood gentrification. The

    world cities hypothesis predicts that world cities proliferate with high-wage and low-wage

    laborers. Since world cities are no longer sites for material production (manufacturing), they are

    to become major markets for the production of knowledge or non-material products, such as

    business plans, marketing strategies, or financial tools. Sassen (1998) states that world cities

    experience a demand for highly specialized and educated workers alongside a demand for

    3 Examples of global or world cities include Tokyo, Frankfurt, Sydney, Singapore, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Bombay,Sao Paulo, Paris, Zurich, Chicago, London and New York (Friedman 2000). For more on the worldwide geographyof global cities see Beaverstock, Smith and Taylor (2000).

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    basically unskilled workers (146). The low-wage jobs created in supportive businesses, such as

    restaurants, hotels, cleaning services, and other occupations, maintain the lifestyle of the high-

    wage workers. The simultaneous need for high-wage and low-wage jobs leads to a bifurcated

    labor market.

    As the CBD expands, neighborhood gentrification occurs due to the increased demand

    for high cost housing close to the CBD. Sassen (1999) states that, central to the development of

    this core in these cities [is]high income commercial and residential gentrification (6). In

    accordance with Sassens theory, Fainstein ([1994] 2001), in The City Builders, a comparative

    study of real estate development in New York and London, states, Central business district (CBD)

    expansion has increased property values in areas of low-income occupancy, forcing out residents,

    raising their living expenses, and breaking up communities (5). The central business district of

    Chicago, as well as NYC, in the 1980s and 1990s, attracts the well-to-do and this relates to the

    economic revitalization and gentrification in Bronzeville and Harlem.4

    New York and Chicago as Global Cities

    By most standards, New York City and Chicago are considered global cities. New York

    and Chicago, as Abu-Lughod (1999) declares are urban nodesthrough which a

    disproportionate fraction of national and international interactions flow (400). During the

    1980s, the amount of foreign direct investment in the New York/New Jersey area increased

    198%, while in Illinois it skyrocketed 245% (see appendix A). With an increasing amount of

    foreign direct investment, processes originating from the international economy affected these

    metropolitan areas. Specifically, deindustrialization and new forms of centralization, related to

    command and control functions, impacted the central business districts of these two major cities.

    4 In the context of this paper, gentrification is defined by the movement of high-income people to an area, whichleads to the displacement of low-income individuals (see Smith [1996] 2000).

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    While manufacturing fled these metropolitan regions, their central business districts grew with

    increasing service sectors employment, middle-class population and high priced real estate.

    Starting in the 1980s, New York and Chicago experienced an expansion of their service

    sector economy with a simultaneous decline in manufacturing. Table 1 displays the changing

    percent of these sectors in New York and Chicago from 1981-1996.

    Table 1.

    New York and Chicago: Percent Employed in Selected Industries, 1981-1996

    1981 1985 1996

    Sector New York Chicago New York Chicago New York Chicago

    Manufacturing 16.0 28.4 14.0 20.9 8.1 17.6

    TCU* 6.5 5.4 6.5 5.8 6.2 7.0FIRE** 11.5 6.1 12.4 7.4 23.2 10.3

    Services 23.3 21.1 26.5 24.6 43.5 37.1Source: Taken directly from Sassen ([1991] 2001: 156)* Transportation, communications and utilities** Finance, Insurance and Real Estate

    In New York manufacturing plummeted 50%, while in Chicago it decreased by 40% between

    1981 and 1996. As the percent of manufacturing decline, the services and FIRE sectors

    increases. The service sector grew from 23% to 44% in New York and 21% to 37% in Chicago.

    The financial, insurance and real estate (FIRE) sector in both cities nearly doubled.

    Additionally, the absolute number of jobs increased, as the regional economies of these cities

    become dominated by service employment. In NYC, 232,000 jobs are added to the economy

    between 1980 and 1998 and in Chicago 147,992 are added between 1981 and 1997 (see appendix

    A).

    As the number of employment opportunities climb, the population, after decades of

    decline, begins to increases in these cities, especially within their central business districts. The

    population in Chicago and New York City increased 4% and 9% respectively, between 1990 and

    2000 (see appendix A). Although these percents might seem small, in comparison to the

    population declines in the 1970s, these gains are not insignificant. Consonant with a population

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    influx and downtown expansion, Harlem and Bronzeville, which occupy spaces abutting the

    edges of their respective CBDs, begin to gentrify in the late 1990s.5

    New York as a Global City

    Any analysis of world cities ranks New York as a preeminent powerhouse on the global

    scene. Today, New York Citys top ten banks maintain approximately 1.2 trillion dollars in

    assets (Gladstone and Fainstein 2003: 84). It is home to two major international exchanges, the

    New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the National Association of Securities Dealers

    Automated Quotations stock market (NASDAQ). Additionally, the city and its suburban ring are

    home to the corporate headquarters of 65 large firms, including those in the financial and media

    sectors (Fainstein [1994] 2001: 35). New York is truly a cosmopolitan city where people from all

    over the world come to visit and do business. In the year 2000, of the 18.4 million tourists that

    come to NYC, 6.8 million (37%) are international tourists (Gladstone and Fainstein 2003: 81).

    In the 1990s, New York City as a whole prospered. InRemaking New York, Sites (2003)

    examines the global/local distinction and the gentrification of the Lower East Side. Commenting

    on the fiscal health and growth of NYC in the 1990s, he states:

    Soaring employment growth in the service sector, fueled by job increases in the business services, was finallyhelping to diminish the citys high unemployment rate to its lowest level since 1980s. Wall Street enjoyed profits of$16.3 billion in 1999, up more than one third from the record of $12.2 billion registered two years earlier. Thecommercial real-estate market was also operating at record levels, driven in part by leasing activity from the high-flying Internet, news-media, and high technology firms in the business-service sector (63).

    5 It is not my intent to test the world cities hypothesis. This is well beyond the scope of this research. There aremany alternative hypotheses to the population increase such as the movement of suburban retirees to the CBD,which is a domestic, demographic trend rather than a global phenomenon. In addition, many suburban markets(commercial and residential) are saturated, thus the central city has a comparative advantage. Again this might notbe linked to globalization. However, it does appear that population influx and inner city gentrification is primarilyoccurring in U.S. cities that are considered global (i.e., Chicago, New York, Charlotte and Washington, D.C.). Thisevidence does add credence to, although by no means does it prove, the global cities hypothesis.

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    Sites remarks effectively illustrate the relationships among the stock market, the high-tech

    industry and rising real estate boom in the city.

    In order to fully understand the connection between the centralization process and

    neighborhood gentrification, it is important to sketch out the spatial geography of New York

    City. The city is comprised of five boroughs: Manhattan, the Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn and

    Staten Island. Manhattan is the principal borough surrounded by the other four. It is comprised

    of 12 community areas and most of the major commercial and financial activity occurs in mid

    and lower Manhattan. While wealthier than the other boroughs, Manhattan does have

    concentrated poverty in three areas, the Lower East Side, Hells Kitchen (west of mid-town), and

    Northern Manhattan. In contrast, the rest of Manhattan contains some of the most expensive real

    estate in the world.

    While employment prospects increased throughout the city, the centralization process

    disproportionately affects Manhattan. In the early 1990s, Manhattans population rises, as other

    boroughs, such as the Bronx and Brooklyn experience a decrease. According to the 1996 New

    York City Housing and Vacancy Survey (HVS), Manhattan experienced the largest percentage

    (7.1%) of population influx compared to the other four boroughs (Schill and Scafidi 1999).

    Additionally, vacancy rates for both residential and commercial spaces decreased in the 1990s.

    According to the 1996 Housing and Vacancy Survey, the vacancy rate of residential, rental units

    in Manhattan stay virtually the same, moving from 3.52% to 3.47%, incredible low rates,

    between 1993 and 1996, while all other boroughs experienced a slight increase (Schill and

    Scafidi 1999). In lower and mid Manhattan commercial space tightens as vacancy rates decline

    from 17.6% and 14.5% in 1990 to 4.9% and 5.0% in 2000, respectively (Fainstein [1994] 2001:

    43).

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    The economic boom, exacerbated by a bullish stock market, leads to a bifurcated labor

    market and polarizes the citys income structure. During the 1990-97 periodearnings in the

    citys finance, insurance, and real estate (FIRE) industries accounted for 57 percent of all

    earnings growth in Manhattan and nearly half of the citys total increase in earnings, note

    Gladstone and Fainstein (94). The changing employment and compensation structure,

    throughout the 1980s and 1990s, results in income polarization; both the number of rich

    households and number of poor households grew (Gladstone and Fainstein 2003).

    Property values in Manhattan soared and neighborhood gentrification persisted, as the

    percentage of service sector employment increased and the gap between the rich and the poor

    spread. Median home values skyrocketed in Manhattan, from $500,000 to over $1 million

    between 1990 and 2000. In the 1990s, many working class neighborhoods in lower and mid-

    Manhattan including the Lower East Side (Mele 2000; Sites 2003), Chelsea and Clinton,

    formerly known as Hells Kitchen, and Times Square (Sagalyn 2001), turned into high rent

    commercial and residential districts. With these low rent neighborhoods developing, affordable

    housing in Manhattan becomes increasingly scant; the numbers of low rent areas, as well as the

    percent of affordable dwellings decrease (New York City Economic Development Corporation

    2004). Sites (2003) comments, Shifts in the citys income structure (economic inequality),

    coupled with the booming land economy, created growing affordability problems for New Yorks

    low-income residents (64).

    The redevelopment of neighborhoods below 96th Street has consequences for Harlem.6

    The bifurcated labor market, with an increase in the number of affluent households, puts market

    6 When using the word Harlem I refer to Central Harlem, which is community district 10 in Manhattan. It is locatedtowards the northern tip of Manhattan and is bounded by Central Park at 110th Street to the south, 155th Street to thenorth, 5th Avenue on the east and Morningside and St. Nicholas Park on the west.

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    pressure on the real estate market in Harlem. This new housing demand first hits undervalued

    parts of lower and mid Manhattan but it eventually moves uptown to Harlem, one of the last low

    rent areas in this borough. David Patterson, a New York State Senator from Harlem, explains:

    Well, between October 10th, 1990 and June 8th, 1998, the Dow Jones on the stock market quadrupled from about 2,500 toover 10,000. In the year of 1999 the NASDAQ increased 81% by itself, there was by 1994, 1995, big numbers [and]nobody knew what to do with it. People started investing and their investing turned this neighborhood into a giant

    scaffold, which is where we are now.

    One expert on economic development in NYC, proclaims, Harlem is gentrifying but all of

    Manhattan is gentrifying. Harlems recent development can only be understood within the

    broader context of Manhattan. Two vignettes from my field notes illustrate the new market

    pressures uptown.

    I attend a real estate event, intended for those interested in buying brownstones in

    Harlem. The gathering takes place in a private VIP room of a bar/restaurant. The room has

    about seven little tables, decorated with leopard skin print tablecloths and votive candles. On the

    walls hang African masks and other artwork. There is a flat screen T.V. on the wall, which at

    has on music videos from Black Entertainment Televisions (BET) 106th and Park. The room

    has a full bar and catered crab cake appetizers are served. Even though the bar is on 72nd Street

    in the Upper West Side, an affluent, homogenous and white area, most of 30 or so people

    attending are African-American bankers, lawyers, doctors and insurance agents. I get myself a

    beer and sit down at one of the tables. An African-American woman in her mid-forties, sitting

    next to me, introduces herself. She explains that she has been looking in Harlem for a while,

    almost two years, but has not found anything in her price range. She tells me that she is

    currently living near Central Park West in a one-bedroom condo, which she bought for $400,000

    on the 18th floor of a high-rise. She says she likes her unit because of the beautiful view of

    Central Park, but she is looking for more space. She explains that she hopes to find a

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    brownstone with three or four levels for around the same price. I then understand why she has

    been looking for so long. In the early 1990s, $400,000 might have afforded a brownstone in

    Harlem, but today most rehabilitated brownstones cost much more. In Manhattans high priced

    real estate market, many two-bedroom condos below 110th Street cost almost nearly $1 million.

    As lower, mid and parts of upper Manhattan become affordable only for the very wealthy, the

    market price for brownstones in Harlem accelerates.

    One afternoon, I am strolling across one of the beautiful brownstone lined blocks, near

    Strivers Row in Harlem, and notice a cardboard, for sale sign in the window. As I walk by, I

    see the door of the building is wide open. I approach the stoop and holler into the house,

    Hello. A woman, in her early to mid 50s, who has dreadlocks and is wearing a red

    handkerchief around her head, comes out. We introduce ourselves and shake hands. She says,

    Are you interested in buying or just looking? I tell her that I am not interested in buying but

    that I live on the block and am curious about the house and would like to see the inside. She

    replies, Sure, and takes me through the three-story structure. Although most of the

    brownstones on the block are rehabilitated, this house is really, as they say, a shell. There is

    no running water. There are holes in the roof and the stairs look as if they might cave in at any

    point and, in fact, I am a little nervous going up them. Most of the original wood has been

    removed and the floors are all torn up. Even though the inside of the house is in bad shape, the

    front exterior is unblemished and with a lot of work this home will become a stunning residence.

    When I finish viewing the dwelling, Anne and I talk on her stoop. I tell her I am studying

    at Columbia University. She says, Are you in urban planning? I said, No, sociology. She

    then asks, Who owns the place you live in? I respond, Chet. She says, I know Chet. His

    place is beautiful, right, with all that cherry wood. I agree. I ask her how long shes owned the

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    house. Anne obtained it from the city 32 years ago when she was a college student at City

    College. She explains that she never really had the money to fix it up. I ask her what she is

    selling it for. She quickly replies, $600,000, thats how much these things are going for these

    days. Things around here have really changed in the last three years. I ask, How much would

    you have asked for three years ago? She says, $350,000. I say, So the market has almost

    doubled in three years, and she replies, Yeah, just about. Although the house is a shell, in

    need of much repair, brownstones in Harlem now command prices between $600,000 to over $1

    million, depending on their condition and location. Three days later the sign is removed; rehab

    begins a month later.

    Those looking to own a house in Manhattan for less than one million dollars must look to

    Harlem. I spoke with one of Harlems few black developers about the conditions affecting the

    housing market. He mentions that as properties values are increased south of Harlem, there is

    this great desire [for]the properties up herebecause people are paying $2,500 [a month] for a

    one bedroom apartment below 110th Street. So they come up here; they can afford [to rent] a

    brownstone for $2,500 and you have 4,000 - 5,000 square feet of space. So, its just

    economically feasible to come here. You know, theres value. The former director of the

    Empowerment Zone explains, Harlem is the only place in Manhattan where you [can] get a

    brownstone shell for between $300,000 and $400,000. Anywhere else in Manhattan the shell

    alone might cost a million. From these accounts, it is apparent the centralization process, in

    Manhattan, below 96th Street is associated with increases in Harlems properties.

    With soaring property values, gentrification occurs in Central Harlem. A staff member

    from one of Harlems leading political officials, declares, We have a big problem of

    displacement here. There are many land speculators out there and very little vacant land so

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    there is nowhere to put people who are displaced. He continues, The gentrification in Harlem

    has two sides to it, one is the small businesses and the other is the resident population. Terry

    Lane, the former head of the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone (UMEZ), when asked about

    whether recent economic development in Harlem would lead to displacement, bluntly states,

    Displacement is a by-product of development. Favorable market pressures lead to the

    rehabilitation of many of the brownstones. Once improvements are made, the landlords either raise

    the price of the rental units or sell the entire building to someone who wants the brownstone as a

    single family home. This forces renters who cannot afford the increases to look for housing

    elsewhere.

    7

    While living in Harlem and working for one of Harlems high raking politicians, I

    witness several low-income residents and small businesses being forced out due to mounting

    market pressures and rising real estate prices.

    In addition to interviewing political and economic elites, I speak with affordable housing

    activists. When discussing the current housing circumstance, one of the organizers declares,

    There are many people who are being displaced here with the improvementsrents at $1,000 a

    month are not affordable to many people here. I inquire about where people are going. One

    explains some people are heading back down South, while another tells me that others are

    moving to parts of the Bronx and over to New Jersey. A similar process of centralization and

    neighborhood gentrification affects Chicago.

    Chicago as a Global City

    The international processes of deindustrilaization (Ranney 2003; Wilson 1996) and

    centralization (Sassen [1991] 2001) affect the metropolitan landscape in Chicago. However,

    Chicago is not on the same global scale as New York City. It has a smaller population and is

    7 For more details on displacement in Harlem read Taylor (2002).

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    less recognized as an international tourist destination. Despite these differences, there are many

    indications that Chicago is a global city. In terms of financial capacity, Chicago has 130

    domestic and 70 international banks and two major exchange markets (i.e., the Chicago Board of

    Trade [CBOT], the Chicago Mercantile Exchange [MERC]). The CBOT and the MERC are

    international exchanges where agriculture and debt futures and options are traded. Although

    Chicago is known for regional and domestic interactions, it exports and imports to and from

    areas all over the world. For example, according to a report by the Chicago Department of

    Development and Planning (1993), the value of exports from Chicago to Japan is $7.6 billion,

    while imports are $5.9 billion. In terms of foreign direct investment, it is estimated that there are

    over 1,600 foreign-owned enterprises in Illinois, mostly in Chicago. Chicagos metropolitan

    region has approximately 55 Fortune 500 companies (Feagin 1998). It is also the fourth

    largest advertising market in the world with sales of approximately $11.2 billion (Short and Kim

    1999). To establish high-speed worldwide connections, in 1991 Chicago substantially expanded

    its telecommunications systems with an investment of $1 billion by Ameritech (now SBC).

    Chicago, unlike NYC, has no boroughs. It is comprised of 77 community districts that

    radiate to the north, south and west around the Loop, Chicagos central business district (CBD).8

    Lake Michigan prevents any eastward expansion. In Chicago, the community areas (i.e., Gold

    Coast, Lincoln Park) just north of the Loop, are primarily white and wealthy, while the near west

    and south sides are mostly comprised of low-income African-Americans. Chicagos transition

    from an industrial center to a more service oriented high-tech economy had repercussions for its

    central business district and the low-income, black neighborhoods just west and south of the

    Loop.

    8Chicagos CBD and Loop are used interchangeable and identify the same area.

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    In Chicago during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s industries fled and the CBD depopulated.

    The number of manufacturing jobs in Chicago, as indicated by Squires et al. (1987), fell from

    668,000 to 277,000 between 1947 and 1982. This circumstance had a disastrous affect on the

    ghettos that surrounded the Loop. Wilson (1996) argues that disappearance of relatively high-

    paid, low-skilled manufacturing jobs created conditions leading to the demise of Chicagos

    Black Belt. Wilson shows that employment rates in Bronzeville, a five-minute drive south of the

    Loop, drastically declined during this time period; in 1950, 69% of men (>14 years) work, while

    in 1990 the percent of teenage and men employed dropped to 37%.

    In Chicago, new forms of centralization follow the deindustrialization process. Data

    from the 1980s and 1990s provide evidence about the growing importance of Chicagos CBD

    and its impact on the real estate values and population demographics in contiguous south and

    west side neighborhoods. Between 1972 and 1982, the number of employment opportunities

    increased in the CBD by 7.9%, while the rest of the citys areas lost 17.4% of their jobs (Squires

    et al. 1987). Another indication of the emergence of the CBD is the fact that between 1980 and

    1990, the CBD had an 85% increase in population, the highest of all community areas in the city

    (Chicago Planning and Development 1997). The CBDs (i.e., the Loop) median home value

    during this time soared from $55,250 to $218,182, nearly a 300% increase. In the 1990s the

    Loops property values stabilized, however the population influx continued and increased by

    40% (see appendix B).

    This process of centralization is accompanied with a polarized labor structure. An article

    by Evanoff et al. (1997) of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago indicates that Chicagos

    financial markets are leading the areas transformation from a manufacturing hub to a service

    center by adding an ample number of financial jobs to the local economy. However, Abu-

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    Lughod (1999), who investigated Chicago as a global city, finds evidence that the expanding

    financial institutions may not be producing benefits for all residents of the Chicago. She states,

    Becoming a global city via the MERC has not contributed general prosperity to the regions

    population; indeed, if anything, it has widened the gap between the haves and the have nots

    (329).

    After the reemergence of the Loop in the 1980s, gentrification begins to occur in many

    near by low-income, black neighborhoods in the 1990s. For example, after forty years of

    population decline, the Near South area, directly south of the Loop, has a nearly 40% increase in

    its population between 1990 and 2000. The new population inhabiting both the CBD and the

    Near South area is made up of mostly high-wage earners, evidenced by the high cost of the

    apartments and new commercial spaces being built. The Near South area, at one point, contained

    several single room occupancy (SRO) buildings, which housed the homeless and those of modest

    income. However, most of these units have recently been demolished or converted to luxury

    condos and rentals. One SRO building, that housed a check-cashing outlet, has been converted

    into a luxury rental building with an expensive breakfast spot on the first floor. Across the street,

    where another SRO building once stood, now stands a large chain grocery store, a Starbucks and

    a dry cleaner. As commercial and residential investments are made in this area, home values

    skyrocket. Some of the recently constructed lofts and condos command prices from $500,000 to

    $800,000. In 1990, household income in the Near South area was $6,804, well below the

    poverty line. By 2000 the household income jumped over 400% to $34,329, a clear sign of the

    Loops expansion and gentrification.

    As the Loop and Near South areas develop, the market pressure mounts in Bronzeville.

    During the 1990s, Bronzeville, which is directly south of the Near South area, had large

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    increases in its home values. Between 1990 and 2000, real estate prices in Douglas and Grand

    Boulevard, the two contiguous districts that make up Bronzeville, rose 67% and 192%,

    respectively. Today in Bronzeville, it is virtually impossible to miss the construction of luxury

    housing developments in the $350,000 to $600,000 range. Many of the vacant lots in the

    community have large posted signs illustrating the new developments to be constructed.

    Although residential construction has been similar to Harlem, commercial development has yet

    to move into Bronzeville.

    Today gentrification and displacement are occurring in Bronzeville. As luxury homes are

    constructed, large high-rise public housing complexes scattered throughout the community are

    coming down and their tenants are being relocated to the more distant south side neighborhoods

    and inner suburbs (Fischer 1999; Venkatesh et al. 2004). One director of a community based

    organization estimates that 17,000 individuals have already been displaced from the State Street

    Corridor, an area where many large public housing high-rises once stood. Displacement is also

    occurring to those living in the private housing market; several private rental units have been

    converted to luxury condos and tenants that are unable to buy are cleared out. In addition,

    landlords that once accepted Section 8 housing vouchers, a housing subsidy for low-income

    individuals, now prefer to rent to market rate tenants.

    The centralization of the downtown is associated with the increased market demand for

    housing in Bronzeville. A program officer from one of the foundations heavily involved in

    grantmaking in Bronzeville explains:

    Affordability has to be a real issue because the Near North Side is so unaffordable. So even with the Near Southdevelopments, where[people] come up pretty quickly with $300,000 to $500,000 to buy some little postage stampsize condominium with a black wrought iron patio, stapled into the side of the building, it still works, its still adraw. I worked in the South Loop when Printers Row and Dearborn Park were all getting built next to the financialdistrict.So I think it is a natural pattern, although I havent studied this, that cities sort of revitalize around thecoreand we are in that kind of pattern, and the Mid-South Side [i.e. Bronzeville] has just been an undiscoveredjewel for lots of people who were looking for new housing. Now, [they] see it and find that the city is really making

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    it a safer place to live and understand the inevitability of the private market in making this place unaffordable forthose who arent like them.

    The program officer outlines the relationship between the development of the South Loop, which

    contains Dearborn Park and Printers Row, middle-class enclaves, the subsequent development of

    the Near South area and then the gentrification process in Bronzeville. He points out that the

    areas in the South Loop that initially developed are located directly across from the financial

    district. Dearborn Park, Printers Row and now the Near South area are spaces that house the

    high-wage service works. Housing these workers near the inner core is associated with the

    demand for properties in Bronzeville.

    A leader of a resident driven association, comments on the rising property values in the

    GAP, a middle-class and professional enclave in Bronzeville:

    Its been remarkable what has occurred on a scale when you look at property values and some people, 17 years ago,paid $15,000 for a house. That same house with nothing done to it, can sell for anywhere up to $250,000. There isone house that is onCalumet. That house has been boarded up [for years]; its on the market for $360,000.Someone is going to come in and put another $100,000 [in repairs], so its a $400,000 house. Someone [else] justbuilt a house in the 3400 block of Calumet and the house isjust shy of $500,000, half a million. I remembertalking to one of my neighbors, and we were saying, were not going to move out until we can sell our house for halfa million dollars. That was 17 years ago, thats not far from being off. Would we have ever thought that [our]houses would have increased in value in that amount of time? No.

    As property values in the Loop and in Bronzeville increase, the link between downtown

    centralization and the neighborhood gentrification becomes evident to one community leader.

    Ron Carter, a former merchant association leader and newspaper editor who grew up in the

    Robert Taylor Homes, a public housing project in Bronzeville, asserts:

    The Loop can only grow so much without expanding. So Bronzeville, which is really next door to the Loop, isgetting that attention. Its just, to me, a normal pattern of a city development when youre close to Loop. You canlook at what contributes to that idea, as the Loop or the surrounding Loop [area] develops, those people of affluent

    financial status do not want to be next door to people in public housing. So in order to attract those people ofaffluent financial status, youre going to have to get rid of the public housing or the menace that would not attractnew buyers. So those folks of lower-income had to go.

    Carter expresses the notion that development of the Loop and its surrounding neighborhoods is a

    normal pattern. This is an understandable assertion since most cities attempt to develop their

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    downtowns. However, Chicagos Loop and its adjacent south side neighborhoods have been

    experiencing population loss and economic decline for so long that the Loops reemergence is far

    from the norm. Although Cater does not use terms that engender ideas of economic

    globalization, clearly he perceives that market forces affecting the downtown are impacting the

    redevelopment of Bronzeville.

    The data on job growth, population flows, and housing prices in the New York and

    Chicago support the predictions of the world cities hypothesis in relation to notions of centrality

    and resulting neighborhood gentrification. While the CBD expands, adjacent inner-city

    neighborhoods are being redeveloped. Although my evidence does not is distinguishes whether

    the new employment opportunities and populations are directly connected to the global

    economy, the data strongly support the patterns of increased centrality and its effects on the

    gentrification of once economically abandoned urban communities.9

    But before concluding that

    globalization alone is leading to the revitalization of Harlem and Bronzeville, we must consider

    the extent to which the downtown centralization and neighborhood redevelopment is a product of

    tangible city action. In following sections, I explore the dynamic interaction between global and

    local actions in structuring notions of centrality and neighborhood gentrification.

    Global-Local Interaction: Chicagos TIFs

    In Chicago, strong evidence suggests that the actions of the city government and

    corporate elites facilitate the processes of centralization and gentrification. For instance, Feagin

    (1998) describes a course of action underway in Chicago among its top 100 business elites to

    plan large scale government infrastructure projects to bring the city to the level they require to

    9 Alternative hypotheses are the empty nesters returning to the central city, however if this was the case we shouldsee inner city development in every major city area. Cities that are experiencing the development of the inner coreare ones that are considered to have global structures, such as Washington, D.C., Charlotte and Boston, as well asNew York City and Chicago. We are not seeing cities such as Kansas City or Detroit develop as much.

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    do this global business profitably (15). For example, the city invests huge sums of public

    money to improve the downtown area and its surrounding communities through the use of Tax

    Increment Financing (TIF), a local economic development tool (see Schwartz, Leavy and Nolan

    1999). TIF is a state statute that allows municipalities to direct local taxes to support public and

    private developments, usually by providing funding for land clearance (for detailed description

    of TIF see Paetsch and Dahlstrom 1990; Ranney 2003).

    The implementation of TIF is an example of the nexus between global and local forces

    since local decisions channel public funds to develop critical, global infrastructure. Schwartz et

    al. (1999), in their comprehensive review of Chicagos TIF programs, indicate that much of the

    new construction in the CBD and Near South area is financed through city bonds issued by local

    TIF authorities. In the city of Chicago, TIFs are the mayors primary economic development

    tool. The city has 69 TIF districts that encompass $2.6 billion worth of property (Schwartz,

    Leavy and Nolan 1999).10 TIF funds have been given to developers to improve the Loops

    entertainment district and for the construction of luxury high-rise apartments in the Near South

    area.11 As indicted by Schwartz et al. (1999), the value of the TIF subsidy in the CBD is $143

    million, while the private developers who receive these funds invest $931 million. In the Near

    South area, the value of the subsidy to developers is $19 million, while private investment is

    $118 million. There are at least six TIF districts, which support business and housing

    construction, in Bronzeville.12

    10 As of April 2002 the city had 119 TIFs that were approved by City Council (Source City of Chicago Departmentof Planning and Development).11 Mayor Daley lives in one of these lavish housing developments in the Near South area.12 The Chicago Housing Authority is using TIFs funds to subsidize the construction of mixed-income housingdevelopments that are to replace the demolished public housing high-rises (see CHA Board of Directors meetingminutes from Fed 18, and May 20, 2003).

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    TIFs exacerbate the process of gentrification because they are based on increasing

    property taxes. In a TIF district, property values are assessed prior to development. This

    measure is called the tax increment base value. Then an evaluation predicts what the increase

    (i.e., increment) in the tax base would be if particular development projects are to occur in the

    area. This predicted tax value is called the tax increment. Based on the prediction of the

    increment, bonds are usually issued to subsidize the cost associated with development. The

    difference between the tax increment base value and the tax increment is the captured assessed

    value and is used to pay back the bonds. Therefore, a successful TIF raises property values. As

    is often the case when property values increase, residents are forced to pay higher property taxes

    or increased rents. Schwartz et al. (1999) exclaim that in Chicago, The problem of

    displacement cuts to the heart of who wins and who loses as a result of the TIF program (21).

    Ron Carter comments on the TIF program and displacement in Bronzeville. He explains

    the TIF is just another funding project thats being used against the people. He declares, I

    dont think TIFs are all that needed, I think theyre just more of how to control the economics of

    a community, opposed to really benefiting it. He acknowledges that TIFs are being used to

    subsidize housing, which helps to stabilize the community but asserts that homeownership

    dont produce no real economic base. According to Carter, a real economic base produces job

    creation. He comments that new housing makes the community look good and beautifies it,

    but it does little to stimulate business development. Carter recognizes that bringing in higher

    income people might eventually attract commercial developments that can hire low-income

    residents but he questions whether this population will be in the community long enough to reap

    those benefits. He declares, Again, its going back to all of these programs and funds that are

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    supposed to benefit the people that live in the community...Hows it going to benefitpeople

    when they dont live there anymore?

    Local political decisions are deploying public funds to entice private capital to the inner

    core of the city. These investments promote features of centrality, seen as critical to creating a

    global city, while at the same time assisting gentrification. The citys actions, through the

    implementation of the TIF program, facilitate the development of the CBD, the Near South area

    and Bronzeville. But it would be foolish to claim that local policy alone brought investments

    into these areas, since businesses and housing developers rarely relocate, expand or build based

    primarily on the availability of public subsidies (Riposa 1996). A plausible argument is that

    favorable investment conditions are created by both an increased importance of locating in the

    CBD and local political actions.

    Global-Local Interaction: BIDs and New York Citys Housing Plan

    New York City uses an equivalent local economic tool called the Business Improvement

    District (BID). There are 46 active BIDs in New York City. BIDs are quasi-governmental

    associations that require a levy from for-profit businesses in a designated district (see National

    Council for Urban Economic Development 1988). BIDs can also function much like TIF districts,

    in that they are granted, by the state, the authority to issue bonds and thus, tend to increase property

    values. Some BIDs use the money to hire security, while others employ funds to increase garbage

    collection services or to make improvements in lighting fixtures or sidewalks. All enhancements

    are paid for by area establishments as a way to promote a business friendly environment. Times

    Square is an example of an extremely successful BID that transformed the area from its seedy days

    to its recent disneyfication. Many sections of lower, mid and upper Manhattan, including 125th

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    Street in Harlem, have their own BID. The BIDs facilitate centralization in Manhattan by making

    certain districts more attractive to investors and increasing property values.

    BIDs harness private interests to improve certain areas, however ample public resources also

    contribute to the centralization process in Manhattan. Throughout Manhattan, but particularly in

    Central Harlem, the citys housing policy plays an important role. In the late 1970s, the city of New

    York became the default manager of nearly 40,000 occupied units and 60,000 vacant apartments

    (see Branconi 1999). During this time, numerous landlords abandoned their buildings and refused

    to pay property taxes. The city repossessed these properties, and either boarded them up or turned

    them into housing stock for homeless and low-income individuals. These properties are known as

    in-rem, the legal term for tax delinquent properties. Starting with the Koch administration in the

    mid-1980s and persisting through the Dinkins and Giuliani administrations, there is a push to return

    these buildings back to the private market. The push to empty the in-rem housing stock is part of

    the citys comprehensive Ten-Year Housing Plan (Schill, Ellen, Schwartz and Voicu 2002). The

    rationale is to have developers rehabilitate these buildings, and sell them to middle and upper

    income individuals, thus generating tax revenues for the city.

    The Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) is implementing three

    strategies to rid the city of its management and ownership duties of the in rem housing stock.13

    It

    turns the management and ownership of the buildings over to the tenants. Under the HPDs

    Division of Alternative Management, the agency attempts to promote homeownership through its

    Tenant Interim Lease (TIL) program. By 1996, 600 buildings have been sold to tenant co-

    operatives, with mixed success. Some remained viable but many go into fiscal deficits. The

    second approach is to sell the housing stock for a minimal price, usually a dollar, to non-profit

    13 Supported through the Community Development Block Grant from HUD (see Braconi 1999: 109).

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    organizations, with the hope that they rehabilitate the buildings and them out to moderate-income

    tenants. As of 1996, 23% of the dispositions are given to non-profits. The last strategy, and

    most controversial, is the Neighborhood Entrepreneurial Program (NEP), which turns the

    buildings over to private, for-profit developers. After his election in 1993, Mayor Giuliani

    appoints a new Housing Commissioner, Deborah Wright, to implement this program. To the

    surprise of many, the initiative focuses on placing the buildings in the hands of minority-owned,

    private developers. The move partly silences advocacy groups because of the goal to improve

    minority businesses, but it does little to secure affordable housing, since few income restrictions

    are placed on the units. Many of the newly redeveloped high priced brownstones and condos in

    Harlem are financed through the citys Neighborhood Entrepreneurial Program.

    During the 1980s, the city controls approximately 65% of the residential properties in

    Central Harlem (Wylde 1999). Since the city owns such a large proportion of Harlem properties

    any HPD action greatly accelerates the development of the community. HPD invests over $400

    million in the greater Harlem area from 1994 to 2000, resulting in a 68% reduction of the number

    of city-owned vacant buildings (New York City Department of Housing Preservation and

    Development 2002). The citys investments are noticed by the private sector, and major banks

    begin financing the rehabilitation and development of newly constructed luxury condos and town

    homes. The once redlined areas of Harlem essentially become green-lined, as every major bank,

    including J.P Morgan/Chase, Fleet and Citibank, invest in residential and commercial

    construction. In fact, one bank alone invests approximately $400 million in Harlem between

    1999 and 2004.

    The head of the community real estate division of one of the large commercial banks,

    during a walk through of Harlem with me, describes the community as, an under served

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    market, compared to areas below 96th

    Street. He declares the housing demand outweighs the

    supply. He then mentions something quite important. He says that in 1996 and 1997 the city

    put numerous subsidies into Harlem to reduce the risk of investments. He speaks about how

    the city provided funds for land clearance and that the bank made an agreement with the city

    that, if homeownership fails, the city would turn the properties back into rentals and buy the

    mortgages from the bank. He indicates that the initial public subsidies facilitated the banks

    decision to invest in Harlem. He then explains how today fewer public subsidies are available

    and that the bank carries more of the risk. Therefore, the bank now supports the construction of

    more market rate and luxury housing in Harlem, which provides a greater return on their

    investments.

    The policy decision to rebuild the citys abandoned housing stock, and the reaction of

    banks to partner with the city and real estate developers, are local actions. However, the process

    of centralization stemming from economic globalization, I argue, facilitates this circumstance.

    Banks do not finance housing construction or rehabilitation unless there is strong evidence that

    the units will sell. I posit that the rise of real estate prices in lower and mid-Manhattan

    encourages greater market demand in Harlem.14

    This new housing demand, created by an

    interaction between global and local forces, helps to reduce investment risk in Harlem but at the

    same time increases the threat of displacement.

    Conclusion

    The intersection of global and local forces is changing the conditions of the inner core of

    certain urban areas. First, patterns of centralization, linked with the global economy, are altering

    the geography of marginal communities. Initial growth in Chicagos and New York Citys

    14 Although I am arguing that economic globalization and investment patterns of the city are associated with themarket demand for housing in Harlem, I am well aware that a lower crime rate is also contributing.

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    CBDs has led to the subsequent gentrification of adjacent low rent neighborhoods. In

    conjunction with the global economy, my evidence suggests that cities actions, the use of

    various public subsidies, facilitate the development of the CBDs. My argument is that an

    increased importance of locating in the CBD, due to the global economy, and local political

    actions are interacting to produce centralization and neighborhood gentrification. Through

    exploring the altering conditions of Bronzeville and Harlem, we witness the complex nature of

    the global/local relationship. The importance of locating in the CBD and local political action

    (the subsidies), effect private capital flows that impact the conditions and configurations of

    poverty. My line of reasoning coincides with Sites (2003), who posits that globalist approaches

    can overemphasize the unmediated impact of the international economy on cities, [while] localist

    frameworks often fail to address the dynamic interplay between [broader forces]and local

    politics (67). This study highlights the notion that centralization and resulting gentrification,

    although influenced by a global dynamic, is largely mediated by local political action.

    One major problem with the evidence presented is the possibility that centralization is due to

    national instead of global forces. In the subsequent chapter, I deal with urban national policy.

    However, there is another argument that must be addressed. For instance, there are accounts of

    empty nesters from the suburbs that retire or buy a second home in the city in order to experience

    the amenities that a city offers.15

    In response to this argument, I point out that if this is the case, we

    should witness an increase of population and inner city gentrification in most major cities across the

    United States. However, the redevelopment of inner city African-American neighborhoods is only

    occurring in cities that are considered global cities, including Charlotte, Washington, D.C. and Los

    15 Chicago Journal: April 15, 2004.

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    Angeles. The development of the inner core is not happening in cities that lack the properties of a

    global city, such as St. Louis, Kansas City and Detroit.

    The pattern of centralization and subsequent neighborhood gentrification illustrated in

    this chapter has drastic repercussions for globalization and urban development theory. Some

    argue that globalization is a supra-national force, affecting countries and cities. However, this

    pattern of central city expansion and community development is by no means a supra-national

    process. With the cases of Bronzeville and Harlem, we witness that a combination of global

    forces and tangible city actions structure their development. The high-wage workers of the

    global economy need to be housed and they are buying homes, subsidized with public monies, in

    and near the central business districts. Although population increase is associated with the role

    of New York City and Chicago as command and control centers, specific policy tools, such as

    the TIFs, BIDs and housing plans, also relate to the centralization process and resulting

    neighborhood gentrification. The redevelopment of Harlem and Bronzeville is a product of the

    interaction between an abstract external force and concrete city actions.

    The notion of natural urban development goes back to the ideas of Park and Burgess ([1925]

    1967) and the early Chicago School of sociology. A substantial amount of research on urban

    community change theory promoted by the Chicago School during the first half of the 20th Century

    explored the roles of ecological or natural forces within the metropolitan space. According to

    traditional ecological theory, urban neighborhoods are an inevitable by-product of natural processes

    by which residents select neighborhoods based on their individual preferences. Park argued that

    residential selection patterns neighborhood formation leading to a mosaic of little worlds, within

    the city. According to the ecological theory, resident selection is the key to understanding

    neighborhood conditions. I argue the new functions of Chicago and New York, as command and

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    control centers, lead to an increased preference for businesses and workers to locate in central

    business district. However, this development is not one sided: a dialectical process shapes

    business and resident preferences. Tangible city action facilitates the centralization and

    neighborhood gentrification process. Just as the suburbs became preferable in the 1950s due to

    large government subsidies (Jackson 1987), certain central cities are becoming desirable again

    based on municipal action.

    This study is relevant beyond New York City and Chicago and the communities of

    Harlem and Bronzville. For instance, centralization and neighborhood gentrification is occuring

    in other major cities, such as London (see Fainstein [1994] 2001). The global/local framework

    outlined in this chapter provides a useful paradigm to explore community transformation in

    various cities connected to the global economy. Further, this study helps explain emerging

    patterns of metropolitan poverty. In NYC and Chicago, low-income people inhabit the inner

    city, however, now these areas are developing and displaced residents are moving to

    neighborhoods farther from the central business districts. Thus, New York and Chicago are

    becoming more like Western European cities in that poverty pockets are now burgeoning on the

    citys outskirts and in certain declining inner suburbs (Fischer 1999; Venkatesh et al. 2004).

    This study highlights important dynamics leading to relocation of poverty in and beyond these

    cities.

    Processes engendered by economic globalization are mediated through local action. Even

    though global dynamics affect the city, metropolitan policies facilitate centralization and

    neighborhood development. Sites (2003) argues that local government powerfar from simply

    eroding in the response to globalization, plays a powerful and often destructive role in facilitating a

    distinctive, neoliberal path of economic development (xii). The redevelopment of Harlem and

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    Bronzeville illustrates the interaction of forces originating from the global and local level. In certain

    cities, centralization occurs as a consequence of a decentralized production process worldwide. As

    the central business districts in global cities expand, development moves to untapped markets and

    neighborhood gentrification results. However, the destructive, yet creative, forces leading to the

    development of inner city neighborhoods are as much determined by the deployment of city

    resources. Thus, in an era of increased economic globalization, city politics remain central.

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    Appendix A

    Table 1.Foreign direct investments (in millions of gross book value dollars)in the United States and in Illinois and New York/New Jersey

    Place 1981 1988 % increase1981-1988

    NY/NJ 14,444 43,092 198%

    Illinois 5,646 19,491 245%

    U.S. total 178,003 385,734 117%Source: Abu-Lughod (1999): p 409.

    Table 2.Population Flows in New York and Chicago*

    Place 1980 1990 2000% Change1990-2000

    NYC** 7,072,000 7,323,000 8,008,000 9%Manhattan** 1,428,000 1,456,000 1,537,000 6%

    C. Harlem 105,641 99,519 107,109 8%

    Chicago 3,005,072 2,783,726 2,896,016 4%

    Loop 6,462 11,954 16,388 37%

    Bronzeville 89,441 66,549 54,475 -18%*Source: Census data.**Source: Fainstein ([1994] 2001): p 232.

    Table 3.Changing employment in New York and ChicagoPlace 1980 1990 1998 Total jobs

    added

    NYC* 3,302,000 3,595,000 3,534,000 232,000

    1981 1987 1997

    Chicago** 2,247,119 2,213,434 2,395,111 147,992

    1981-1987 1987-1993 1993-1996

    U.S.** 85,483,800 94,789,444 102,198,864 1,6715,064*Source: Fainstein [1994] 2001: p. 233.** Source: Sassen [1991] 2001: p. 151 and 131.

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    Appendix B

    Chicago

    Table 1. Changing Median Home Values in Selected Communities

    Communityarea 1980 1990 2000 % Change1990-2000

    Loop $55,250 $218,182 $202,476 -7%

    Near South $32,500 $283,333 $335,101 18%

    Douglas $25,900 $124,632 $208,449 67%

    G.B. $23,400 $61,601 $179,849 192%

    Chicago Ave. $47,200 $78,700 $132,400 68%Source: Census data.

    Table 2. Changing Median Household Income

    Communityarea 1980 1990 2000 % Change1990-2000

    Loop $19,596 $48,331 $65,128 35%

    Near South $10,197 $6,804 $34,329 405%

    Douglas $14,536 $12,993 $24,835 91%

    G.B. $9,092 $7,146 $14,178 98%

    Chicago Ave. $25,644 $26,301 $38,625 47%Source: Census data.

    Table 3. Changing Population

    Communityarea

    1980 1990 2000 % Change1990-2000

    Loop 6,462 11,954 16,388 40%

    Near South 7,243 6,828 9,509 39%

    Douglas 35,700 30,652 26,470 -14%

    G.B. 53,741 35,897 28,006 -22%

    Chicago % - - - 4%Source: Census data.

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    Table 4. Changing Median Home Values in Selected Manhattan Districts

    Communityarea

    1980* 1990 2000 % Change1990-2000

    3 Lower EastSide/Chinatown $13,449 $268,750 $192,000 -27%

    4 Chelsea,Clinton/HellsKitchen

    $78,733 $500,001 $1,000,000+ 100%

    5 Mid-Town $170,710 $500,001 $875,000 75%

    10 C. Harlem $53,873 $199,025 $250,000 26%

    Manhattan Ave. $146,731 $487,300 $1,00,000+ 105%

    NYC Ave. $82,894 $189,600 $211,900 12%Source: Census data.*In 1990 constant dollars.

    Table 5. Changing Median Household Income

    Communityarea

    1980* 1990 2000 % Change1990-2000

    3 Lower EastSide/Chinatown

    $14,707 $20,007 $28,745 44%

    4 Chelsea,Clinton, HellsKitchen

    $20,442 $30,450 $50,580 66%

    5 Mid-Town $27,213 $42,050 $69,075 64%

    10 C. Harlem $10,872 $13,252 $19,920 50%

    Manhattan Ave. $23,305 $32,262 $47,030 46%NYC Ave. $23,221 $29,823 $41,887 40%Source: Census data.* Adjusted to 1989 dollars.

    Table 6. Changing Population

    Communityarea

    1980 1990 2000 % Change1990-2000

    3 Lower EastSide/Chinatown

    154,848 161,617 164,407 2%

    4 Chelsea,Clinton, HellsKitchen

    82,164 84,431 87,479 4%

    5 Mid-Town 39,544 43,507 44,028 1%

    10 C. Harlem 105,641 99,519 107,109 8%Source: Census data.