Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1008560 | Cities | 2013 | 14 Pages |
Over the last two decades we have witnessed the global rise and spread of urban development policies aimed at stimulating the cultural economy. However, with the onset of the global financial crisis and recession, the cultural economy may experience a dramatic reorganization and even decline. Given the attention many cities place on the cultural sectors it is important to examine how they fare following this major economic event. To do so, this article examines the occupational distribution and geographic structure of the cultural economy in the 30 largest US metropolitan areas during recession and captures the changes that have occurred over the last decade. Based on this analysis, we identify a set of key trends, which highlight that while the boom period is generally characterized by widespread and, in some places, extreme growth in the cultural sectors, the recession is a period of selective growth and not a period of total decline. These findings have implications for determining the relevance of the arts and cultural sectors as targets of urban economic development policy in the post-recession era.
► Widespread growth characterizes cultural sectors during an economic boom. ► Recession offers selective growth in cultural sectors – not total decline. ► Regions with a high cultural economy concentration remain dominant during recession. ► Results suggest the cultural economy is tied to industries and not economic trends. ► The cultural economy’s clustering dynamics vary across occupation and geography.