Archive
 
Video Library
Store
 
Online StoreShopping Cart
About
 
Program DirectoryBroadcast ScheduleChannel LocatorAbout the Ohio ChannelFrequently Asked QuestionsContact UsAffiliatesJob OpportunitiesSite RequirementsMedia Information
 
 
ARCHIVESTOREABOUT
 
Video Library
 
 
Online Store Shopping Cart
 
 
Program Directory Broadcast Schedule Channel Locator About The Ohio Channel Frequently Asked Questions Contact Us Affiliates Job Opportunities Site Requirements Media Information
 
 
 
The Sound of Ideas - 8-5-2021 - Why Is Pittsburgh's Economy Greater Than Cleveland's? Expand
 
 
August 5, 2021
08-05-2021
32 Views
Share Download
 
Start At    sec      End At    sec
 
Link
Embed Code
Available Versions
Download 720p Video
 
 
To download a video: right-click on the version you'd like to save, then choose "Save Link As..." and save to your desktop.
 
Collections
The Sound of Ideas
 
Description
We all know Cleveland and Pittsburgh have been sports rivals for generations, but while the Browns may have bested the Steelers in the last two matchups, and the baseball teams split their last two games last month, the Steel City has substantially bested our region over the past two decades in another area -- the economy.

Pittsburgh has even received a new moniker over the past few years, the Tech Mecca, with companies like Google, Uber and Facebook building hub operations there. The Burgh even has a section of the city where dozens of tech companies are concentrated, working on autonomous technologies, and robotics, and artificial intelligence, called "Robotics Row."

Cleveland meanwhile, has struggled economically since the 80s, unable to keep pace in job creation or economic growth compared with other big cities, despite being known as a regional "health hub" and while still trying to come back from our manufacturing losses of the past few decades. And, we shouldn't forget that Cleveland currently has the highest poverty rate among large cities in the country according the US Census bureau, narrowly overtaking Detroit last year.

But our discussion today centers on why have the two rustbelt cities that are only a little more than two hours apart by car, diverged so much in their economies?

It's the topic of a debate that was published in the journal Economic Development Quarterly in June, and on the Sound of Ideas, we'll get into the different theories with researchers involved in the forum for most of this hour.

And at the end of the hour, we'll meet one of the winners of this year's Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards.

Guests:
-Ben Armstrong, Ph.D., Research Scientist, & Interim Executive Director, Industrial Performance Center, MIT
-Tim Bartik, Ph.D., Senior Economist, W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research
-Ned Hill, Ph.D., Professor of Economic Development, John Glenn College of Public Affairs, The Ohio State University
-Sabina Deitrick, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Urban Planning & Co-Director, Urban and Regional Analysis Program, University Center for Social and Urban Research University of Pittsburgh
-Christopher Briem, Regional Economist, University Center for Social and Urban Research, University of Pittsburgh
-Carrie Wise, Managing Producer, Arts & Culture, Ideastream Public Media
-Natasha Trethewey, Author, "Memorial Drive"
 
 
 
Copyright Disclaimer Terms of Use Contact Us Support
 
 
© 2023 The Ohio Channel / ideastream.
All Rights Reserved.