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An excellently written and excellently argued piece in Asia Times:
Those who have visited Michigan recently or the Mahoning Valley of Ohio in the 1980s can recognize the symptoms of a rust belt. A hitherto prosperous industry, paying high wages to its employees, has been overtaken by market changes and is forced into harsh downsizing or even bankruptcy. As a result, the lives of many inhabitants degenerate into alcoholism, home foreclosures and welfare.
This time around, the decaying industry is finance, and the rust belt cities are London and New York.
As I have written previously, in and after the 1980s the central activity of the financial sector became not service but rent-seeking. Finance doubled its share of gross domestic product (GDP) in the 30 years to 2006, but very little of the addition represented products and services that provided true value to the economy as a whole.
... For the financial practitioners of New York and London, the future is thus bleak. Rewards will be greatly reduced, as the market operates ferociously both on the income side and the employee costs side of their employers. Headcount will also be greatly reduced, as functions are eliminated, work is outsourced to the Third World and the weaker entities go bankrupt or are merged into competitors. The decline in practitioners' incomes might be as much as 80%, even after a modest market recovery, though the number of practitioners should reduce by only 50% to 60%.
In New York, the "rust belt" effect will be severe but not overwhelming - it will be 1970s Cleveland rather than 1980s Youngstown. Many of the skyscrapers of the financial district and the luxury residential areas will become ghost buildings, as their predecessor buildings did in the 1930s, but they are unlikely to descend to the chain-round-the facility guarded-by-a-Rottweiler-and-a-tattooed-thug state symptomatic of the worst industrial blight.
London will be the Youngstown of this downturn, an excellent market for Rottweilers, wire mesh and tattooed thugs. The city's Docklands area in particular will revert to its 1970s squalor, albeit with some very expensive buildings scattered around. Few of the financial institutions that have prospered so lavishly in the London of the past couple of decades are British owned, and those that are were excessively involved in the British mortgage market - an even bigger disaster than the US market because home values were even more outrageous at the peak.
Given that the financial sector will be downsizing anyway, will top management in Frankfurt, New York or Tokyo want to keep its stable of expensive London whiz-kids in order to continue participating in a market that was never central to their overall strategy and is now unprofitable? I doubt it.
Even the Russian mafia may leave, though probably to Cyprus rather than Moscow. Whereas New York's downturn may produce municipal bankruptcy, London's downturn has a fair chance of producing national bankruptcy. Going forward, British youth will have to find a new way to make a living - single-malt Scotch and tourism cannot support a nation of 60 million people.