How the World Works

Triumph of the low-carbon city dweller

Here's a cool map mashup you can play with all Fourth of July weekend long, courtesy of the Center for Neighborhood Technology, via a tip from Eric Hess at Sightline.

Using the Housing & Transportation Affordability Index, you can zoom in on different regions of the U.S. and get an immediate, visceral sense of how much city, suburban, and country dwellers are paying for gas and transportation, both in absolute terms and as a percentage of their total household budgets. Even better, you can compare the figures between 2000, when gas was around $1.81 a gallon, and 2008...

I, of course, went straight to the San Francisco Bay Area, and who would have guessed it? Residents of San Francisco and Berkeley pay a lot less for gas, both absolutely, and as a percentage of their total household budget, than do the suburbs and even further outlying regions. But saying it is one thing -- looking at it is another. Forget all that back-to-the-land utopianism -- the city is where it's at, if you wanna go low-carbon.

But what's really scary is the color-coding changes from 2000 to 2008. In 2000, the urban regions are generally yellow -- indicating expenditures on gasoline between $0 and $1600 per year, and the suburbs are beige -- $1600-$2400. There are only a few scattered orange and red spots -- ranging from $2400 to $3800.

Flash forward to 2008: The entire map is SCREAMING RED, with much smaller patches of orange and minuscule splotches of yellow... in downtown San Francisco and Oakland.

Watching the defense contractors
Lockheed Martin got $20 billion from the U.S. government in 2009. Want a list of invoices? Go to USAspending.gov
A lesson in White House economic Kremlinology
Simon Johnson reads the entrails and says Larry Summers is moving away from Geithner's pro-bank stance
America gets laid off, Goldman Sachs employees get a raise
The June jobs report is a serious bummer, but "the good times continue to roll" on Wall Street
Even Amish values aren't recession-proof
Fancy horses, luxury carriages -- it all goes to heck when the economy implodes

About How the World Works

A conversation about globalization.

Recent Posts

A lesson in White House economic Kremlinology
Simon Johnson reads the entrails and says Larry Summers is moving away from Geithner's pro-bank stance
America gets laid off, Goldman Sachs employees get a raise
The June jobs report is a serious bummer, but "the good times continue to roll" on Wall Street
Even Amish values aren't recession-proof
Fancy horses, luxury carriages -- it all goes to heck when the economy implodes

Full Archive

RSS Feed

Posts by date

July 2009
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031

Comments?

You can e-mail me directly at aleonard@salon.com. But to join the conversation with your comments, please use our letters to the editor feature at the bottom of each article.