远程工作与城市衰落:服装区的经验教训

IF 3 1区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Clayton P Gillette
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引用次数: 0

摘要

远程工作的急剧兴起威胁着城市增长的传统来源——密集城市提供一种独特的能力,在这种能力中,企业和员工可以共享生产资源,将需求与技能相匹配,并以低成本传播知识。这些“集聚效益”促使城市追求相关企业集群,这些企业集群是当地经济发展和技术创新的基础。远程工作减少了相关公司共处一地的必要性,其受欢迎程度使评论员预测,随着传统集群的消失,城市商业活动、税收和服务将大幅减少。目前尚不清楚城市将如何应对远程工作现象。然而,之前的集群衰退表明,当过时的经济模式威胁到当地的衰退时,城市很难转向新的经济模式。相反,城市倾向于支持现有的集群,尽管即将到来的衰退是外部力量而非地方政策的作用。这篇文章讨论了远程工作可能导致的集群减少与城市反应之间的潜在不匹配。这篇文章的理论是,市政当局为支持一个衰落的集群所做的持续努力,源于受影响的企业能够联合起来,行使政治影响力,并利用分散的市政决策来维持现状,维持或增加市政当局对集群的补贴,并阻止竞争对手进入城市资源。在集群衰退迫在眉睫的情况下,这些战略阻碍了该市向生产率更高的经济转型。然后,本文转向纽约市服装业的历史来阐述这一理论。这段历史为城市应该和不应该应对远程工作带来的威胁提供了一个警示。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Remote Work and City Decline: Lessons From the Garment District
The dramatic rise of remote work threatens the traditional source of urban growth—the unique ability of dense cities to provide a setting in which firms and employees share productive resources, match needs with skills, and transmit knowledge at low cost. These “agglomeration benefits” have induced cities to pursue clusters of related firms that have served as the basis for local economic development and technological innovation. Remote work reduces the necessity for related firms to co-locate, and its popularity has led commentators to predict significant decrease in city business activity, tax revenues, and services as traditional clusters dissipate. It remains unclear how cities will react to the remote work phenomenon. Prior episodes of cluster decline, however, reveal that cities have difficulty pivoting to new economic models when outmoded ones threaten local decay. Instead, cities tend to support existing clusters, notwithstanding that the impending decline is a function of external forces rather than of local policies. This article addresses the potential mismatch between cluster decline that may flow from remote work and city responses. The article theorizes that continued municipal efforts to support a declining cluster emerge from the ability of affected firms to coalesce, exercise political influence, and exploit fragmented municipal decision making to preserve the status quo, maintain or increase municipal subsidies for the cluster, and deter entry by competitors for city resources. Those strategies impede the city’s transition to a more productive economy in the face of looming cluster decline. The article then turns to the history of the garment industry in New York City to illustrate the theory. That history provides a cautionary tale about how cities should and should not respond to the threats they face from remote work.
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CiteScore
4.10
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16 weeks
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