After a 20th-century manufacturing boom, the region has been in a decadeslong decline. Rural factory towns can blame technology and globalization for their woes.
One might argue that the current mess is a legacy effect of the South’s historical dependence on a low-skill, low-cost growth “strategy” — beginning with slavery — that privileged short-term economic gains over patient investment in human capital and long-term development. That’s a big claim about a larger, more complex story.
But…that seems like what the entire section titled “The Origin of the Rural Crisis” is about.
This latter point became increasingly important, since the South, a low-cost manufacturing region in the U.S., is a high-cost manufacturing region when compared to, say, Mexico.
And, because it was relatively high-cost, it lost those manufacturing opportunities to globalization.
But…that seems like what the entire section titled “The Origin of the Rural Crisis” is about.
And, because it was relatively high-cost, it lost those manufacturing opportunities to globalization.