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News & Issues > Economist Claims Optimism for Flint; Really?!?
 

Economist Claims Optimism for Flint; Really?!?






This was a news story on a local station this evening.  Because this is a community with several GM factories, the rejection of a bailout plan weighs heavily on many minds, and not just those who work for GM.  For every auto worker job that is lost, it is estimated that at least seven other jobs will be lost.



Pardon my skepticism, but I am not placing a lot of faith in the predictions made by the economist mentioned in this story.  I am not all gloom and doom; I'm not saying that there would be another Great Depression if GM were to fail.  But, honestly, how well off would any of us be?  What would the quality of our life be?





Discussion held Friday afternoon in Flint



(12/12/08)--A University of Michigan-Flint economist is predicting that
Flint is in a better position than the rest of the country to weather a
future with a downsized General Motors Corp.
Hundreds came together for an economic forum put together by U of
M-Flint to try and answer general questions about the current economic
crisis.
But
with a Senate rejection of the automakers' bailout loan and worries
about the future of GM, some of the discussion was directed to those
concerns as well.
"A lot of people are wondering what happens to
life after General Motors, life after the manufacturing sector," said
said Prof. Mark Perry.
Perry, a nationally renowned economist, sought to reassure the
audience that Flint was actually in a better position than the rest of
the country to weather such a manufacturing storm.
Armed with
data from Flint's job numbers, Perry pointed out that that economic
realities show Flint has moved from a manufacturing-based economy to a
primarily service-based economy because of the manufacturing realities
over the past 18 years.
"One out of every three jobs were manufacturing. One out of every six jobs," he said.
Perry
claims because the Flint economy has already weathered a long and
gradual downturn in manufacturing jobs, it could survive life without
GM better than the rest of the country.
As for the economy as a
whole, Perry predicted a rough time for the global economy through
2009, but that global growth would continue through 2010.
And he
used his data to put to rest any fear that we are on the verge of
returning to the days of the Great Depression, comparing 10,000 failed
banks in the 1930s, 3,000 during the Savings and Loan crisis of the
'80s, but just 23 failed banks in the recession of 2008.

(Copyright ©2008 WJRT-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

posted on Dec 12, 2008 5:10 PM ()

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