Ep 124:  The New Geography Of Jobs

Ep 124: The New Geography Of Jobs

Enrico Moretti is a professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley. His research covers the fields of labor economics and urban economics. Professor Moretti's book, "The New Geography of Jobs", was awarded the William Bowen Prize for the most important contribution toward understanding public policy and the labor market.

His research has been covered by The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Forbes, The Atlantic, Businessweek, The Economist, The New Republic, CNN, PBS and NPR. He lives in San Francisco with his wife and the son. 

When considering the overall 'health' of the US economy, Professor Moretti believes that it is generally good. Compared to the time period of the great recession, job creation has picked up. Additionally, within the last six months, wages have picked up. When asked about how to assess the 'health' of the economy, he suggests that rather than look at day-to-day changes, such as the media, focus on the yearly changes. That gives a more realistic perspective.

Overall, American's with a high school diploma have found their wages reduced by 20% and are less well off than the previous generation. On the other hand, those with associate's college degrees or above– are doing better each passing year. This includes their standard of living, not only salaries but future outlook, their overall assets, and even their marital stability. This has created significant differences in earnings between those with more education and those with less. In fact, 30 years ago, it was less than a 40% spread; now it's more than double – at 80%.

For the past 30 years the US has been losing 350,000 blue collar positions in manufacturing per year. A change that is not just a US phenomenon, but is also found in other advanced countries – such as Japan and Germany. This has been predominantly based on increased automation in factories

Automation – robots, artificial intelligence – has had a profound effect on jobs. The new technology and automation have changed the face of jobs in manufacturing plants. Fewer people are required and instead of blue collar workers, they are highly skilled engineers. This change has lead to an increased need for higher skilled workers.

When asked about the US cities that have undergone the most amount of change in the past 30 years, Moretti cited three that have had positive transformations: Austin, Texas, Raleigh/Durham, North Carolina and Seattle, Washington. Each of these has become an area of global innovation, has an availability of an excellent work force and also provides high wages.

In contrast, those he sees struggling are found in the 'rust-belt'. For example, Detroit and Flint, Michigan as well as Rochester, New York, which have lost population due to a reduction in the need for traditional manufacturing jobs and therefore, lower wages and innovation.

Specifically, Moretti has found that the US can be divided into 'three Americas'.

1. American Brain Hubs – strong workers with more than 40% of the population which holds a college degree. These include cities such as Boston, New York City and San Francisco. These cities are productive, innovative and provide higher salaries.

2. Former Manufacturing – struggling, shrunk in size, lost in terms of aggregate population.

3. Neither Brain Hub nor Former Manufacturing – maintaining current productivity and fairly stable population

What you will learn in this episode:

  • Why one tech job can increase the economy by multiples
  • Why cities with more college graduates are beneficial to all
  • Why the ecosystem of a city matters
  • The current 'health' of US economy
  • What effects AI and Automation have had on jobs
  • The differences in labor markets across different cities
  • What cities Enrico is paying attention to that are going through big changes
  • Enrico's thoughts on universal basic income

Jaksot(1178)

Anthropic Built an Early Warning System for AI Job Loss, Here's What It's Already Detecting

Anthropic Built an Early Warning System for AI Job Loss, Here's What It's Already Detecting

March 5, 2026: The company making AI (Anthropic) just published real data on what AI is actually doing to jobs — and the finding that should concern everyone isn't layoffs. It's that the hiring door f...

6 Maalis 48min

AI Is Hiring, Gen Z Is Struggling, Your Meetings Are Fake, and Our Schools Are Broken

AI Is Hiring, Gen Z Is Struggling, Your Meetings Are Fake, and Our Schools Are Broken

March 4, 2026: The ECB just released new data showing companies that use AI are hiring, not firing — but the full story of what happened to bank tellers reveals why that optimism has a shelf life. USA...

4 Maalis 41min

The CEO AI Paradox, Job Hugging, and Why Electricians Are the Hottest Job in Tech

The CEO AI Paradox, Job Hugging, and Why Electricians Are the Hottest Job in Tech

March 3, 2026: The hype around AI and jobs is loud. The actual data tells a more nuanced story. This week, Stanford economist Nick Bloom released the most rigorous study yet on AI's impact on employme...

4 Maalis 37min

Solving the $2 Trillion Student Debt Crisis with U.S. News & World Report CEO Eric Gertler

Solving the $2 Trillion Student Debt Crisis with U.S. News & World Report CEO Eric Gertler

Many parents and leaders are wondering if a college degree is still worth the high educational costs. With student debt reaching nearly $2 trillion and the AI impact changing the future of work, the t...

2 Maalis 48min

Jack Dorsey Just Fired 40% of His Company. Stock Soared 24%. He Says You're Next

Jack Dorsey Just Fired 40% of His Company. Stock Soared 24%. He Says You're Next

February 27, 2026: Jack Dorsey cuts 40% of Block's workforce — 4,000 jobs — credits AI, and predicts most companies will follow within a year. We do a deep dive on whether this is genuine AI transform...

27 Helmi 38min

Engineers Are Burning Out, Young Workers Are Shut Out, and Trade Schools Are Suddenly Elite

Engineers Are Burning Out, Young Workers Are Shut Out, and Trade Schools Are Suddenly Elite

February 26, 2026: Engineers are facing a productivity panic as coding agents accelerate output — and pressure — at the same time. Nvidia just posted a staggering quarter, underscoring how fast the in...

26 Helmi 36min

Anthropic Abandons Safety Promise, JPMorgan Replacing Workers, & The Top Skills for 2026

Anthropic Abandons Safety Promise, JPMorgan Replacing Workers, & The Top Skills for 2026

February 25, 2026: This week Anthropic — one of the companies most associated with responsible AI — gutted the safety commitment it made in 2023. The same week the Pentagon gave its CEO a Friday ultim...

25 Helmi 37min

Anthropic Moved Into Your Office, the Fed Admitted It Can't Help, and Goldman Said It Was All for Nothing

Anthropic Moved Into Your Office, the Fed Admitted It Can't Help, and Goldman Said It Was All for Nothing

February 24, 2026: Five major stories broke in the last 24 hours at the intersection of AI and the future of work — and they're all in conversation with each other. Anthropic launched Claude directly...

25 Helmi 47min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
mimmit-sijoittaa
rss-rahapodi
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-rahamania
rss-sisalto-kuntoon
ostan-asuntoja-podcast
rss-lahtijat
hyva-paha-johtaminen
rss-startup-ministerio
rss-sami-miettinen-neuvottelija
rss-seuraava-potilas
lakicast
herrasmieshakkerit
leadcast
rahapuhetta
rss-porssipuhetta
rss-rentotapaus
rss-tyoelamasta-podcast
rss-viisas-raha-podi