2018’s Cities with the Most & Least Diversified Economies

1:26 AM

Posted by: Richie Bernardo

“Don’t put all your eggs in one basket,” say the wisest investing experts. But that wisdom applies to the economy, too. During the Great Recession, local economies that diversified, tapping into new ideas and innovations, proved to be more resilient than the cities that stuck to their old tricks.

Some researchers have found that greater professional and industrial variety increases a city’s productivity, a pattern in growing and large urban areas in the U.S. and around the globe.

In other words, diversification helps an economy the way it protects an investor’s portfolio: Over time, job gains in some sectors will offset the losses in others. And that was exactly the outcome at the end of the financial crisis, when the number of professions in health care and social assistance multiplied while construction and manufacturing occupation rates declined.

In order to determine the most diversified local economies — and therefore the least susceptible to the changes in the market — WalletHub compared the 501 largest cities across three key metrics: industry diversity, occupational diversity and worker-class diversity. Read on for our findings, expert commentary from a panel of researchers and a full description of our methodology.

  1. Main Findings
  2. Ratio - Over Time
  3. Highest & Lowest Concentrations by Category
  4. Ranking by City Size
  5. Ask the Experts
  6. Methodology

Main Findings
*1=Most Diverse  

Ratio - Over Time

Highest & Lowest Concentrations by Category

Metric

City with Highest Concentration

City with Lowest Concentration

Industry Diversity  
Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting, and mining Gillette, WY (23.40%) Glasgow, DE (<0.00%)
Construction Tanaina, AK (14.80%) Cambridge, MA (1.10%)
Manufacturing Columbus, NE (32.70%) Alamogordo, NM (0.60%)
Wholesale trade Keene, NH (6.80%) Sitka and, AK (0.40%)
Retail trade Bentonville, AR (33.50%) Arlington, VA (4.30%)
Transportation and warehousing, and utilities North Platte, NE (16.00%) Middlebury, VT (0.20%)
Information Los Angeles, CA (6.00%) Pike Creek Valley, DE (<0.00%)
Finance and insurance, and real estate and rental and leasing West Des Moines, IA (23.70%) Knik-Fairview, AK (1.80%)
Professional, scientific, and management, and administrative and waste-management services Arlington, VA (28.70%) Wahpeton, ND (3.30%)
Educational services, and health care and social assistance Ann Arbor, MI (49.20%) Cicero, IL (11.80%)
Arts, entertainment, and recreation, and accommodation and food services Spring Valley, NV (37.70%) West Hartford, CT (5.50%)
Other services, except public administration Washington, DC (9.00%) Evanston, WY (1.10%)
Public administration Juneau, AK (22.40%) Central Falls, RI (0.50%)
Occupational Diversity  
Management, business, science, and arts occupations Cambridge, MA (71.40%) Central Falls, RI (9.10%)
Service occupations Sunrise Manor, NV (35.70%) Hockessin, DE (7.70%)
Sales and office occupations Kalispell, MT (33.50%) Lebanon, NH (13.60%)
Natural resources, construction, and maintenance occupations Rock Springs, WY (23.90%) Cambridge, MA (1.30%)
Production, transportation, and material moving occupations Reading, PA (32.90%) Arlington, VA (2.60%)
Worker-Class Diversity  
Private wage and salary workers Central Falls, RI (93.40%) Juneau, AK (53.50%)
Government workers Juneau, AK (38.40%) Central Falls, RI (3.30%)
Self-employed in own but unincorporated business workers Sitka and, AK (12.40%) Pike Creek Valley, DE (2.00%)
Unpaid family workers Havre, MT (2.20%) Fairbanks, AK (<0.00%)

Ranking by City Size
Rank Large City Name (Score) Rank Midsize City Name (Score) Rank Small City Name (Score)
1 Sacramento, CA (76.59) 1 Clarksville, TN (76.66) 1 Lawton, OK (77.58)
2 Fresno, CA (76.43) 2 Hampton, VA (76.27) 2 Pearl City, HI (77.58)
3 Bakersfield, CA (76.40) 3 Norfolk, VA (76.23) 3 South Valley, NM (77.56)
4 El Paso, TX (75.99) 4 Salem, OR (76.20) 4 Juneau, AK (77.30)
5 Corpus Christi, TX (75.90) 5 Anchorage, AK (76.04) 5 Knik-Fairview, AK (77.28)
6 Virginia Beach, VA (75.67) 6 Chesapeake, VA (76.03) 6 Portsmouth, VA (77.23)
7 Oklahoma City, OK (75.57) 7 Montgomery, AL (75.95) 7 Hilo, HI (77.23)
8 Los Angeles, CA (75.42) 8 North Charleston, SC (75.87) 8 Clovis, NM (77.19)
9 Long Beach, CA (75.35) 9 Jackson, MS (75.67) 9 Carson City, NV (77.17)
10 Honolulu, HI (75.30) 10 Columbus, GA (75.55) 10 Mililani Town, HI (77.17)
11 Miami, FL (75.01) 11 Laredo, TX (75.55) 11 Badger, AK (77.07)
12 Tucson, AZ (74.72) 12 Newport News, VA (75.50) 12 Sitka and, AK (77.05)
13 Fort Worth, TX (74.67) 13 Fayetteville, NC (75.39) 13 Green River, WY (77.01)
14 Oakland, CA (74.56) 14 Hialeah, FL (75.30) 14 Cheyenne, WY (76.86)
15 Houston, TX (74.56) 15 Augusta, GA (75.09) 15 Tanaina, AK (76.77)
16 Aurora, CO (74.55) 16 Kansas City, KS (75.08) 16 Midwest City, OK (76.70)
17 Memphis, TN (74.54) 17 Tacoma, WA (75.07) 17 Goose Creek, SC (76.69)
18 Arlington, TX (74.51) 18 Topeka, KS (74.95) 18 Riverton, WY (76.50)
19 San Antonio, TX (74.44) 19 Newark, NJ (74.86) 19 Kaneohe, HI (76.43)
20 Phoenix, AZ (74.38) 20 Kent, WA (74.85) 20 Alamogordo, NM (76.42)
21 Colorado Springs, CO (74.29) 21 Thornton, CO (74.79) 21 Ewa Gentry, HI (76.28)
22 Albuquerque, NM (74.29) 22 Lakewood, CO (74.76) 22 Lakes, AK (76.24)
23 Mesa, AZ (74.18) 23 Gresham, OR (74.75) 23 Wasilla, AK (76.20)
24 Austin, TX (74.18) 24 Vancouver, WA (74.74) 24 Santa Fe, NM (76.14)
25 Anaheim, CA (74.09) 25 West Valley City, UT (74.71) 25 Pierre, SD (76.12)
26 Dallas, TX (73.86) 26 Baton Rouge, LA (74.64) 26 Moore, OK (76.04)
27 San Diego, CA (73.79) 27 Lansing, MI (74.61) 27 Fairbanks, AK (76.02)
28 Jacksonville, FL (73.69) 28 Las Cruces, NM (74.54) 28 Enid, OK (75.98)
29 Tulsa, OK (73.62) 29 Reno, NV (74.52) 29 Waldorf, MD (75.93)
30 Kansas City, MO (73.59) 30 Billings, MT (74.47) 30 Hobbs, NM (75.92)
31 Nashville, TN (73.36) 31 Lincoln, NE (74.45) 31 Sumter, SC (75.77)
32 Louisville, KY (73.30) 32 Cape Coral, FL (74.42) 32 Clarksburg, WV (75.72)
33 New York, NY (73.27) 33 West Jordan, UT (74.42) 33 Roswell, NM (75.72)
34 Cleveland, OH (73.24) 34 Metairie, LA (74.40) 34 Gulfport, MS (75.69)
35 Columbus, OH (73.22) 35 Lafayette, LA (74.34) 35 Yakima, WA (75.66)
36 Wichita, KS (73.18) 36 Independence, MO (74.33) 36 Casper, WY (75.65)
37 Chicago, IL (73.16) 37 Glendale, AZ (74.31) 37 Martinsburg, WV (75.64)
38 Indianapolis, IN (73.13) 38 Springfield, IL (74.28) 38 Minot, ND (75.58)
39 Detroit, MI (73.04) 39 Arvada, CO (74.25) 39 Dickinson, ND (75.58)
40 New Orleans, LA (72.96) 40 Columbia, SC (74.24) 40 Sanford, ME (75.57)
41 Raleigh, NC (72.90) 41 Chattanooga, TN (74.22) 41 Albany, GA (75.55)
42 Denver, CO (72.85) 42 Murfreesboro, TN (74.08) 42 Kailua, HI (75.54)
43 Lexington, KY (72.79) 43 Joliet, IL (74.07) 43 Bossier City, LA (75.49)
44 Tampa, FL (72.78) 44 Boise, ID (74.04) 44 Layton, UT (75.46)
45 Omaha, NE (72.72) 45 Savannah, GA (74.03) 45 Rock Springs, WY (75.42)
46 Baltimore, MD (72.70) 46 Westminster, CO (74.01) 46 College, AK (75.38)
47 Portland, OR (72.69) 47 Des Moines, IA (73.98) 47 Augusta, ME (75.37)
48 San Jose, CA (72.60) 48 Everett, WA (73.97) 48 Anaconda, MT (75.33)
49 Milwaukee, WI (72.48) 49 Fort Lauderdale, FL (73.89) 49 Farmington, NM (75.29)
50 Charlotte, NC (72.42) 50 Spokane, WA (73.82) 50 Caldwell, ID (75.24)
51 Las Vegas, NV (72.09) 51 Birmingham, AL (73.73) 51 Butte-Silver Bow, MT (75.15)
52 St. Louis, MO (71.98) 52 Tallahassee, FL (73.73) 52 Glen Burnie, MD (75.15)
53 Philadelphia, PA (71.76) 53 Macon, GA (73.67) 53 Miles City, MT (75.12)
54 Atlanta, GA (71.59) 54 Elizabeth, NJ (73.62) 54 Mandan, ND (75.10)
55 San Francisco, CA (71.57) 55 Little Rock, AR (73.60) 55 Lewiston, ID (75.09)
56 Washington, DC (71.52) 56 North Las Vegas, NV (73.59) 56 Williston, ND (75.08)
57 Minneapolis, MN (71.15) 57 Knoxville, TN (73.55) 57 Idaho Falls, ID (75.05)
58 Seattle, WA (70.63) 58 Broken Arrow, OK (73.52) 58 Biloxi, MS (75.04)
59 Boston, MA (69.27) 59 Peoria, AZ (73.51) 59 Greenville, MS (75.03)
60 Pittsburgh, PA (68.96) 60 Huntsville, AL (73.46) 60 Federal Way, WA (75.02)
61 Henderson, NV (73.45) 61 Post Falls, ID (74.99)
62 Eugene, OR (73.43) 62 Sheridan, WY (74.92)
63 Fort Collins, CO (73.43) 63 Ogden, UT (74.91)
64 Greensboro, NC (73.42) 64 Rio Rancho, NM (74.88)
65 Manchester, NH (73.39) 65 Bellevue, NE (74.83)
66 Charleston, SC (73.37) 66 Havre, MT (74.83)
67 Pueblo, CO (73.31) 67 Coeur d'Alene, ID (74.79)
68 Bridgeport, CT (73.30) 68 Summerville, SC (74.78)
69 Mobile, AL (73.26) 69 Nampa, ID (74.75)
70 Norman, OK (73.17) 70 Kenner, LA (74.68)
71 Shreveport, LA (73.16) 71 Twin Falls, ID (74.67)
72 Surprise, AZ (73.15) 72 Harrisburg, PA (74.66)
73 Yonkers, NY (73.08) 73 Pine Bluff, AR (74.63)
74 Wilmington, NC (73.07) 74 Elizabethtown, KY (74.61)
75 Toledo, OH (73.06) 75 Evanston, WY (74.58)
76 Salt Lake City, UT (73.05) 76 Pocatello, ID (74.54)
77 Port St. Lucie, FL (73.05) 77 Gillette, WY (74.52)
77 Davenport, IA (73.05) 78 Kahului, HI (74.51)
79 Dayton, OH (73.03) 79 Rapid City, SD (74.51)
80 Richmond, VA (72.96) 80 Helena, MT (74.50)
81 Elgin, IL (72.93) 81 Olive Branch, MS (74.50)
82 Athens, GA (72.82) 82 Bend, OR (74.48)
83 Alexandria, VA (72.81) 83 Horn Lake, MS (74.40)
84 St. Petersburg, FL (72.80) 84 Sparks, NV (74.39)
85 Fargo, ND (72.79) 85 Great Falls, MT (74.39)
86 Green Bay, WI (72.76) 86 Danbury, CT (74.35)
87 Olathe, KS (72.75) 87 Smyrna, DE (74.34)
88 Waterbury, CT (72.68) 88 Taylorsville, UT (74.33)
89 Akron, OH (72.64) 89 Jamestown, ND (74.33)
89 Lowell, MA (72.64) 90 Hastings, NE (74.32)
91 Gilbert, AZ (72.57) 91 Spearfish, SD (74.32)
92 Springfield, MA (72.57) 92 Meridian, ID (74.31)
93 High Point, NC (72.54) 93 Frederick, MD (74.17)
94 Chandler, AZ (72.52) 94 Medford, OR (74.13)
95 Buffalo, NY (72.51) 95 East Honolulu, HI (74.12)
96 Aurora, IL (72.47) 96 Norfolk, NE (74.09)
97 Tempe, AZ (72.45) 97 Bismarck, ND (74.08)
98 Springfield, MO (72.38) 98 Waipahu, HI (74.05)
99 Stamford, CT (72.13) 99 Missoula, MT (74.05)
100 Fort Wayne, IN (72.06) 100 North Little Rock, AR (74.05)
101 Warren, MI (72.03) 101 Trenton, NJ (74.04)
102 Rockford, IL (72.01) 102 Rock Hill, SC (74.01)
103 Worcester, MA (71.99) 103 Toms River, NJ (74.00)
104 St. Paul, MN (71.99) 104 Silver Spring, MD (73.96)
105 Evansville, IN (71.98) 105 Meridian, MS (73.96)
106 Cedar Rapids, IA (71.97) 106 Norwalk, CT (73.95)
107 Hartford, CT (71.97) 106 Union City, NJ (73.95)
108 Jersey City, NJ (71.92) 108 Barre, VT (73.92)
109 Centennial, CO (71.83) 109 Edmond, OK (73.92)
110 Paterson, NJ (71.81) 110 Southaven, MS (73.91)
111 Madison, WI (71.73) 111 Springfield, OR (73.90)
112 Sioux Falls, SD (71.68) 112 Bartlett, TN (73.85)
113 Winston-Salem, NC (71.65) 113 Dover, DE (73.85)
114 Allentown, PA (71.57) 114 Concord, NH (73.80)
115 Sterling Heights, MI (71.56) 115 Council Bluffs, IA (73.78)
116 Cincinnati, OH (71.56) 116 Decatur, AL (73.75)
117 Erie, PA (71.48) 117 Covington, KY (73.72)
118 Grand Rapids, MI (71.44) 118 Bristol, CT (73.71)
119 Hillsboro, OR (71.29) 119 Watertown, SD (73.71)
120 Orlando, FL (71.18) 120 Bozeman, MT (73.66)
121 Columbia, MD (71.07) 121 Grand Island, NE (73.63)
122 Sunrise Manor, NV (70.97) 122 Hopkinsville, KY (73.62)
123 Syracuse, NY (70.62) 123 Lorain, OH (73.62)
124 South Bend, IN (70.39) 124 Aberdeen, SD (73.57)
125 Plano, TX (70.35) 125 Brookings, SD (73.57)
126 Scottsdale, AZ (70.21) 126 Albany, NY (73.55)
127 Columbia, MO (70.13) 127 Yankton, SD (73.54)
128 Durham, NC (70.09) 128 Roanoke, VA (73.49)
129 Rochester, NY (69.93) 129 Rochester, NH (73.49)
130 Overland Park, KS (69.80) 130 Dothan, AL (73.48)
131 Providence, RI (69.78) 131 Florence, KY (73.48)
132 Peoria, IL (69.51) 132 Renton, WA (73.45)
133 Arlington, VA (69.33) 133 Levittown, PA (73.44)
134 Cary, NC (69.27) 134 Parkersburg, WV (73.44)
135 Sandy Springs, GA (69.21) 135 Rutland, VT (73.44)
136 Naperville, IL (69.01) 136 Lynn, MA (73.43)
137 Enterprise, NV (68.99) 137 Charleston, WV (73.40)
138 Paradise, NV (68.97) 138 Clifton, NJ (73.37)
139 Provo, UT (67.88) 139 Gary, IN (73.34)
140 Bellevue, WA (67.29) 139 Mitchell, SD (73.34)
141 Spring Valley, NV (67.08) 141 Wheeling, WV (73.33)
142 New Haven, CT (67.02) 141 Laconia, NH (73.33)
143 Rochester, MN (62.85) 143 Conway, AR (73.29)
144 Ann Arbor, MI (62.43) 144 Schenectady, NY (73.28)
145 Cambridge, MA (60.03) 145 Weirton, WV (73.27)
146 Cheektowaga, NY (73.19)
147 Grand Forks, ND (73.19)
148 Bowling Green, KY (73.17)
149 Kalispell, MT (73.16)
150 Fairmont, WV (73.15)
151 Alexandria, LA (73.15)
152 Owensboro, KY (73.13)
153 New Rochelle, NY (73.12)
154 Germantown, MD (73.09)
155 Youngstown, OH (73.08)
156 Sandy, UT (73.04)
157 Fremont, NE (73.04)
158 Auburn, ME (73.02)
159 Wahpeton, ND (73.01)
160 New Bedford, MA (72.98)
161 Hattiesburg, MS (72.96)
162 Sioux City, IA (72.96)
163 Warwick, RI (72.95)
164 North Platte, NE (72.92)
165 West Fargo, ND (72.91)
166 St. George, UT (72.90)
167 Bennington, VT (72.87)
168 Fall River, MA (72.87)
169 Beckley, WV (72.87)
170 Scranton, PA (72.86)
171 Georgetown, KY (72.82)
172 St. Joseph, MO (72.81)
173 Derry, NH (72.81)
174 Shawnee, KS (72.80)
175 Canton, OH (72.78)
176 Lawrence, KS (72.75)
177 Lake Charles, LA (72.74)
178 Salina, KS (72.70)
179 Cranston, RI (72.70)
180 Bear, DE (72.68)
181 Cicero, IL (72.64)
182 Dover, NH (72.62)
183 Jonesboro, AR (72.62)
184 Parma, OH (72.62)
185 Hammond, IN (72.59)
186 Newport, RI (72.57)
187 Richmond, KY (72.52)
188 Racine, WI (72.50)
189 Tuscaloosa, AL (72.49)
190 Kearney, NE (72.47)
191 Dubuque, IA (72.46)
192 Waukegan, IL (72.44)
193 Hilton Head Island, SC (72.44)
194 New Britain, CT (72.43)
195 Lewiston, ME (72.43)
196 Woonsocket, RI (72.42)
197 Brookside, DE (72.42)
198 East Providence, RI (72.42)
199 Passaic, NJ (72.39)
200 Biddeford, ME (72.37)
201 Mount Pleasant, SC (72.37)
202 Bloomington, MN (72.36)
203 Saco, ME (72.35)
204 Beaverton, OR (72.30)
205 Monroe, LA (72.27)
206 Janesville, WI (72.26)
207 Brattleboro, VT (72.26)
208 Huron, SD (72.23)
209 Kenosha, WI (72.23)
210 Nashua, NH (72.22)
211 Valley Falls, RI (72.22)
212 Keene, NH (72.20)
213 Springdale, AR (72.19)
214 Manhattan, KS (72.18)
215 Flint, MI (72.17)
216 Stillwater, OK (72.14)
217 Brockton, MA (72.12)
218 Fort Smith, AR (72.10)
219 Gaithersburg, MD (72.09)
220 Lee's Summit, MO (72.07)
221 O'Fallon, MO (72.04)
222 Dearborn, MI (72.03)
223 Waterloo, IA (72.00)
224 Greenville, NC (71.98)
224 Winooski, VT (71.98)
226 Oshkosh, WI (71.90)
227 South Portland, ME (71.90)
228 Fayetteville, AR (71.88)
229 Jackson, TN (71.87)
230 Rogers, AR (71.86)
231 Orem, UT (71.86)
232 Eau Claire, WI (71.86)
233 Westland, MI (71.83)
234 Westerly, RI (71.76)
235 St. Cloud, MN (71.75)
236 Madison, AL (71.74)
236 Portsmouth, NH (71.74)
238 Tupelo, MS (71.72)
239 Westbrook, ME (71.71)
240 Wilmington, DE (71.67)
241 Quincy, MA (71.61)
242 Livonia, MI (71.61)
243 Pawtucket, RI (71.56)
244 Rockville, MD (71.55)
245 Laramie, WY (71.53)
246 Brooklyn Park, MN (71.51)
247 Appleton, WI (71.46)
248 St. Peters, MO (71.45)
249 Camden, NJ (71.37)
250 Lenexa, KS (71.35)
251 Hoover, AL (71.30)
252 Lancaster, PA (71.29)
253 Essex Junction, VT (71.24)
254 Waukesha, WI (71.20)
255 Johnson City, TN (71.16)
256 Portland, ME (71.14)
257 Mount Vernon, NY (71.04)
258 Bethlehem, PA (70.92)
259 Columbus, NE (70.91)
260 St. Charles, MO (70.89)
261 Roswell, GA (70.82)
262 Auburn, AL (70.80)
263 Ames, IA (70.79)
264 Lafayette, IN (70.71)
265 Duluth, MN (70.65)
266 Franklin, TN (70.58)
267 Reading, PA (70.57)
268 Greenville, SC (70.53)
269 Middletown, DE (70.46)
270 Woodbury, MN (70.32)
271 Corvallis, OR (70.32)
272 Glasgow, DE (70.24)
273 Montpelier, VT (70.22)
274 Bangor, ME (70.06)
275 Burlington, VT (70.04)
276 Ellicott City, MD (69.96)
277 Bloomington, IN (69.84)
278 Huntington, WV (69.66)
279 Pike Creek Valley, DE (69.58)
280 Morgantown, WV (69.48)
281 Fishers, IN (69.29)
282 Maple Grove, MN (69.23)
283 South Burlington, VT (69.21)
284 West Des Moines, IA (69.16)
285 Jackson, WY (69.15)
286 West Hartford, CT (69.08)
287 Plymouth, MN (68.90)
288 Central Falls, RI (68.81)
289 Johns Creek, GA (68.45)
290 Iowa City, IA (68.24)
291 Carmel, IN (68.10)
292 Newark, DE (67.93)
293 Middlebury, VT (67.69)
294 Bentonville, AR (67.13)
295 Hockessin, DE (66.55)
296 Lebanon, NH (66.22)

Ask the Experts

Many scholars advocate for economic diversification, rather than specialization, to strengthen local economies. To shed more light on the benefits of the former, we asked a panel of experts to weigh in with their thoughts on the following key questions:

  1. What are the benefits to residents of living in an economically diverse city?
  2. Did cities with diversified economies better weather the recent economic downturn? Why?
  3. Are cities with diversified economies more likely to experience job and wage growth than cities with more specialized economies? Under what conditions?
  4. What policies and strategies can local authorities employ in order to encourage the diversification of the local economy?
< > Gary A. Hoover Chair and Professor of Economics, University of Oklahoma Gary A. Hoover What are the benefits to residents of living in an economically diverse city? An economically diverse city, just like a diverse portfolio of stocks, is a shield against unforeseen downturns in certain sectors of the economy. Cities too dependent on one sector or one major employer are at the mercy of fickle market fluctuations. Did cities with diversified economies better weather the recent economic downturn? Why? Some cities fared somewhat better but the recent downturn was so systemic that very few areas of the economy were spared. All cities strive for a thriving housing market and increased income growth for its residents but even if the housing market in a city was not impacted, the secondary impacts to other parts of the economy were still felt. Are cities with diversified economies more likely to experience job and wage growth than cities with more specialized economies? Under what conditions? This is a difficult question to answer. Just recently we saw that cities/regions/states that had heavy concentrations in the oil and gas industry saw tremendous increases in jobs and wage growth. However, those same places are now experiencing much more accelerated declines in both jobs and wages. So in the end, did specialization help or hurt? What it does, it makes the highs higher but the lows lower. That type of volatility is not good for any economy. What policies and strategies can local authorities employ in order to encourage the diversification of the local economy? Policies that involve seed funding have proven to be effective if applied to the correct industry. Several cities have created arts councils to try to attract the film industry to their areas as a way of diversification. The results have been mixed because there are only so many films being made outside of Hollywood and there is tremendous competition. However, trying to attract other industries through tax incentives of seed funding can be effective. Michael Ash Chair and Professor of Economics and Public Policy, University of Massachusetts Amherst Michael Ash What are the benefits to residents of living in an economically diverse city? Economic diversity offers resilience in the face of economic change. An extreme case of economic monoculture is Detroit, which has suffered severely because of the decline of its all-eggs-in-one-basket automobile industry. A diverse economy permits less painful adjustment and creates greater possibility that the next big thing is already present. On the other hand, economic agglomeration can be a great engine of wealth with significant benefits for workers as well as owners -- machine tools in Springfield, Massachusetts, Detroit in its heyday, computers in Silicon Valley, optics in Rochester, finance in NYC, and so on. Agglomeration is a source of both wealth and vulnerability. Did cities with diversified economies better weather the recent economic downturn? Why? I'm not sure; that's an empirical question. There is evidence (from my colleague Fidan Kurtulus) that firms with worker participation and more widely held ownership better weather recessions. So that's another type of diversity in the economic ecosystem. Are cities with diversified economies more likely to experience job and wage growth than cities with more specialized economies? Under what conditions? My sense is that many of the biggest job and wage booms have been in concentrated or agglomerated areas (Silicon Valley, Route 128, etc.) Diversified economies may be better at sharing prosperity in the long run (although it's hard to separate cause and effect) and may also be better positioned defensively, if times change for the worse. So diversity may offer some protection against cycles of boom and bust. What policies and strategies can local authorities employ in order to encourage the diversification of the local economy? Local leadership should avoid the subsidy trap, offering enormous tax breaks to try to attract a big employer. It's almost irresistible because other cities are also bidding for the same companies, but it is often a race to the bottom. It would be good to have state or even Federal leadership in preventing these bidding wars. Here are some resources that local leaders can use to consider the options: Andrew J. Cassey Associate Professor of Economics, Washington State University School of Economic Sciences Andrew J. Cassey What are the benefits to residents of living in an economically diverse city? Though still at risk for systemic shocks, economically diverse cities are insured against idiosyncratic shocks. Did cities with diversified economies better weather the recent economic downturn? Why? The anecdotal evidence I am aware of does not seem to support that claim. My understanding is the hardest hit cities such as Las Vegas, Miami, and Phoenix are not diverse but neither were the successes of Williston / Minot / Bismarck ND. I don’t know the data to support a general case. Are cities with diversified economies more likely to experience job and wage growth than cities with more specialized economies? Under what conditions? This does not seem to be necessarily true. The recent experiences of North Dakota show that non-diverse economies can have huge job and wage growth, at least for some time. What policies and strategies can local authorities employ in order to encourage the diversification of the local economy? They can use tax incentives and subsidies to introduce other types of business that would otherwise not be competitive in that city. Whether they should do that is another question. Andrew J. Hussey Associate Professor of Economics, University of Memphis Andrew J. Hussey What are the benefits to residents of living in an economically diverse city? Economically diverse cities provide residents some insurance against major economic downturns, globalization, changing legislation, and natural technological progress, each of which is likely to have a differential effect on various industries and occupations. A varied economic composition in terms of jobs can also draw a diverse mix of residents, which could lead to cross-pollination of ideas -- or, at the very least, make life more interesting. Sunwoong Kim Professor of Economics, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Sunwoong Kim What are the benefits to residents of living in an economically diverse city? More diverse jobs are available so that better match can be found between talents and job requirements. More diverse consumption goods and services are available, but the advantage of consumption goods are sharply reduced by the development of modern transportation system which is cheap and fast. However, diverse and more specialized service is valuable. Did cities with diversified economies better weather the recent economic downturn? Why? Not necessarily. Specialized cities with stable and growing demand for their products can weather economic downturn, however, a large city specialized in a declining industry will be hit hard in the economic downturn. Detroit would be a good example. It has been specialized in automobile manufacturing, a declining industry in the U.S. (although it is a booming industry globally). The fall of U.S. auto industry brought down Detroit. San Jose specialized in ICT industry that has been booming for the last several decades, and it has been doing well. Large cities (such as New York and L.A.) tend to be more diversified and are more likely to be stable throughout the business cycle. Are cities with diversified economies more likely to experience job and wage growth than cities with more specialized economies? Under what conditions? Not necessarily. Cities with growing industry are likely to experience growth in employment and wage. Small cities cannot be diversified too much. It needs to specialize in industries that have more competitiveness. At the same time, large cities specializing in a declining industry need to be more diversified in order to avoid the long term stagnation. What policies and strategies can local authorities employ in order to encourage the diversification of the local economy? Diversification cannot be the goal. It needs to be competitive in growing industries. However, if a city is specialized on declining industry it needs public policy attention. For example, Rochester specialized in film industry – it has gone down (at the same time Seattle specialized in ICT and aeronautics has been growing). David Brasington James C. and Caroline Kautz Chair in Political Economy, University of Cincinnati David Brasington What are the benefits to residents of living in an economically diverse city? One of the main benefits is for dual-income households. A husband and wife typically work in different sectors, so they are more likely to both find jobs in a city with a large, diversified economic base. As for recipients of public services, if a city's Achilles' heel is struck, residents face huge cuts in services as the tax base suffers. In a more diversified economy, if one sector experiences a decline (oil, autos), maybe there is another sector that can make up for the slack or at least not stagnate, allowing tax collections to be relatively stable. Did cities with diversified economies better weather the recent economic downturn? Why? No: cities heavy into fracking technology did best. But cities that were heavily dependent on the sectors that got hit hardest suffered most, like autos, finance, and real estate. Are cities with diversified economies more likely to experience job and wage growth than cities with more specialized economies? Under what conditions? All else equal, large cities and cities with favored amenities (weather, recreation, and geography) will fare better in wage and job growth. Having a large concentration of people seems to generate knowledge spillovers that are necessary for innovation and growth, so large cities have an advantage in spawning new firms. Large cities also help solve the two wage-earner job search problem I mentioned above. What policies and strategies can local authorities employ in order to encourage the diversification of the local economy? There is tax competition and TIF competition to attract businesses, yes, but the best thing a local government can do is to offer quality public services at the lowest tax cost possible. Make sure there's enough land zoned for all the land uses needed in an area (industrial, commercial, residential). Make sure local residents are well-trained to compete for jobs. Have neat stuff that will attract young, highly-educated workers. Don't pick favorites: the market will let you know what types of firms will find your location attractive. Myles Shaver Professor of Strategic Management and Entrepreneurship, and Pond Family Chair in the Teaching and Advancement of Free Enterprise, Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota Myles Shaver What are the benefits to residents of living in an economically diverse city? I have observed three benefits of living in an economically diverse city. The first is the diversification benefit associated with regional economic stability. Living in a city with a diverse economy dampens the effect of a decline in any one sector. For example, cities dependent on the oil industry see notable declines in their tax base when oil prices drop. In these cases, cities face the difficult choice of having to cut spending or look for new sources of revenue. A diverse economy is less likely to see such pronounced swings. Second, a diverse economy experiences less marked supply and demand swings for its workforce. For example, during the last economic downturn Minneapolis-St. Paul – a metropolitan area with a diverse economy – had the lowest unemployment rate among the large metropolitan areas in the country. In part, this was because not all industries were contracting at the same rate – and some were expanding. Even when a city’s economy revolves around one fast-growing industry, worker shortages can stunt the industry’s growth. Although such growth might attract workers to the region, large waves of migration can also create societal difficulties if they outstrip a region’s ability to absorb the migrating workforce. A diverse economy is less likely to experience protracted misalignment of employment supply and demand. Third, to the extent that an employee’s skills are transferable across sectors, I have seen many employees benefit from working in a diverse range of industries over their career. This diversity of experience often deepens their underlying skills while broadening the applicability of these skills. A city with a diverse economy allows individuals to build their careers in this manner without having to relocate and uproot their family or sever their ties to the community.

Methodology

In order to identify the most diversified local economies, WalletHub compared 501 of the most populated U.S. cities — limiting each state to no more than 10 cities each - across three key metrics, which are listed below with their corresponding weights and subcomponents. Each metric was graded on a 100-point scale, with a score of 100 representing the most economic diversity.

We conducted our analysis using the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index method, which is a commonly accepted measure of market concentration that also works effectively as a general-purpose measure of diversity.

Our sample considers only the city proper in each case and excludes cities in the surrounding metro area. Each city was categorized according to the following population-size guidelines:

  • Large cities: More than 300,000 residents
  • Midsize cities: 100,000 to 300,000 residents
  • Small cities: Fewer than 100,000 residents

We then determined each city’s weighted average across all metrics to calculate its overall score and used the resulting scores to rank-order our sample.

Industry Diversity - Total Points: 60

Note: Considers the civilian employed population aged 16 and older

  • Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting, and mining
  • Construction
  • Manufacturing
  • Wholesale trade
  • Retail trade
  • Transportation and warehousing, and utilities
  • Information
  • Finance and insurance, and real estate and rental and leasing
  • Professional, scientific, and management, and administrative and waste management services
  • Educational services, and health care and social assistance
  • Arts, entertainment, and recreation, and accommodation and food services
  • Other services, except public administration
  • Public administration
Occupational Diversity - Total Points: 20

Note: Considers the civilian employed population aged 16 and older

  • Management, business, science, and arts occupations
  • Service occupations
  • Sales and office occupations
  • Natural resources, construction, and maintenance occupations
  • Production, transportation, and material moving occupations
Worker-Class Diversity - Total Points: 20

Note: Considers the civilian employed population aged 16 and older

  • Private wage and salary workers
  • Government workers
  • Self-employed workers (operating their own, unincorporated businesses)Note: Includes “people who worked for profit or fees in their own unincorporated business, professional practice, or trade or who operated a farm,” as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau.
  • Unpaid family workers

 

Sources: Data used to create this ranking were collected from the U.S. Census Bureau.



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