Yes, a lot of these sorts of measurements tend to just be population heat maps. Going down the list of most populous metro areas in the U.S. [1] or the most populous counties [2], all the top places are represented in the list. Although there are a few outliers at the edges (e.g. Charlotte, NC seems to punch above its weight).
Lowe's, Duke Energy... I'd probably have expected Wake County in that general area but that's something of a bias because of tech--and because it's the capital.
As the article notes, this isn't purely explained by population--but a lot of it is. It's maybe also worth noting that, for a lot of those metros, a decent chunk of the working population lives far enough outside of the metro area to be in another county. (Some businesses are too of course but probably less than the number of people.)
I work for an office in the RDU aka the Research Triangle.
We're mostly or entirely remote. Lots of long commutes for the people who are obligated to come in.
Big names and decent salaries for the COL, though.
They do display that comparison—that the counties they identify represent 32% of the GDP, but only 22% of the population. Still, they also show that it's been pretty constant, so I don't know if it's a meaningful grouping.
And that delta is cut in about half if you look at share of employment as opposed to total population (which includes retired people, etc.)
By the time you take into account commuters from outside the metro county, I wonder how much difference there is at all.
And clearly the two numbers have to be highly correlated. Most people live near where their jobs are and the combination of their consumption and the money they're paid are big components of GDP.
So while employment concentration and GDP concentration may be interesting, they're pretty much different measures of more or less the same thing.
On the flip side, the counties containing Orlando and Tampa aren't in the top 31 by GDP although they're in the top 31 by population. Similarly for Nassau and Suffolk counties (Long Island) in New York, I think, although I'm just working from the map in the OP so it's hard to be sure - I guess the money made by people living in those counties gets attributed to jobs in the city.
> And 2/3rds of the US population lives in 3.5% of the land area, what do you expect?
Per the article, it's more than just that, unsurprisingly.
"A large population and workforce is only part of the story. Last year, these counties represented $1.3 trillion more of nationwide GDP than the share of workers alone would account for. Looking at population, their combined share of GDP rose even as their share of overall population fell. The difference may stem from other aspects of a city, such as clusters of activity or networks, that improve productivity."
Sounds like a recipe for right-wing populism in a federal system like the US, where less populous areas are having the terms of their local economies dictated by unchecked market concentration of players in urban centers.
You’re not going to convince rural America that their rents should be driven up because an east coast private equity firm needs greater returns or that Amazon warehouse work is a good job because it enables high-paid tech salaries in Seattle. It’s a problem that has to be addressed because of the particularities of our politics and economy.
Why would the rents in rural Montana increase due to COL in Seattle? They're separate markets. If you're within a commutable distance, they're not. Remote work skews this a little bit, but until it's widespread it's not a measurable impact on real estate prices or broader COL.
Because Capital seeking ever greater returns knows no geographic boundaries nor is it especially considerate of the local viability of its arrangements. Just look at what Buffet-owned Clayton Homes is doing with trailer park mortgages in rural areas:
I think it's interesting that in your previous post you harp on East Coast PE firms and Amazon ('coastal elites') and then in this example Buffet is based in Nebraska and Clayton Homes is based in Tennessee.
Then they will be welcome to not receive subsidies from the urban areas either. It is an adjustment that needs to happen. For work that must be done in rural areas, compensation needs to be greatly increased to offset the lack of conveniences.
I don't think you realize how cheap rural areas are. For instance, I grew up in a small town in Missouri and you can buy a house there for less than $20,000[0]. It needs a lot of work but still. Compensation does need to be greatly increased in these areas, people just need to stop trying to compare two radically different areas. Each area should only be compared to its older self. If the area is constantly making more money per person year over year, the peoples lives there will get better and better.
These are fine sentiments, but wages have been stagnant for most low-paid workers for some time, and over half of the US falls into that category. They’re certainly not meaningfully rising in relation to the costs of housing and healthcare. The “lack of conveniences” you describe include things like access to grocery stores and medical care. The subsidies they receive from urban centers aren’t translating to material improvement for the vast majority of them, so you still have to square the circle of American geography, politics, and wealth concentration in its economy.
The wages are stagnant because the demand for labor is not sufficiently high. So either the supply of labor needs to go down (which it is slowly as population is decreasing in rural areas), or the demand for labor needs to go up. There is no other long term solution. One can argue for subsidies to ease the transition, but a permanent subsidy situation is not ideal.
When you say unchecked market concentration it sounds like you want some sort of governmental solution to check that market concentration - what's the proposal.
The correction here is not to spread things out again but to adapt to the concentration.