speeches · February 5, 2007
Regional President Speech
Michael Moskow · President
INNOVATION + INTEGRATION SUMMIT
CHICAGO METROPOLITAN AGENCY FOR PLANNING (CMAP)
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO
Chicago, Illinois
February 6, 2007
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Integrated Planning for a Global City
Globalization has brought new opportunities to large cities such as Chicago. Large cities are best
suited to perform the advanced business services that global transactions require, such as finance,
law, and logistics. However, because our large cities are so complex and diverse, and because their
residents live and work so closely together, large cities face intense and competing demands on land
use and public services.
If Chicago is to continue to stand out as one of the nation’s leading cities and continue to expand its
global role, it must function efficiently in its internal circulation of ideas, goods, and—the hallmark
of great cities—people. In this regard, I would like to put into context how very useful the new
CMAP organization can be to the future of Chicago.
We can begin to understand our current challenges and opportunities by examining our own past
development. The emergence of Chicago is a story that combines our city’s entrepreneurial spirit
with the blessing of geography. Looking back to 1840, Chicago was a humble burg of 4500 people. It
was the 92nd largest city in the U.S.; Detroit was twice as big, St. Louis was four times larger,
Cincinnati was ten times bigger, and New Orleans had 100,000 more people. But the region sur-
rounding Chicago was poised for growth. The Midwest contained a seemingly boundless and largely
untapped wealth of natural resources. It had furs and game, minerals, timber, coal, and the world’s
richest soils for agricultural and livestock production.
Chicago had a great natural location advantage to bring these goods to market. It lay at the intersec-
tion of the two great waterways of the interior, the Mississippi Basin and the Great Lakes. Several
Michael Moskow Speeches 2007 455
bold infrastructure initiatives shaped Chicago into the primary vehicle for using the waterways to
gather and distribute these commodities. Local projects included opening the harbor mouth of the
Chicago River and building the Illinois and Michigan Canal, which linked Chicago to the Mississippi
Valley, St. Louis, New Orleans, and the Gulf of Mexico. The construction of the Erie Canal linked
Chicago to New York City and the East via the Great Lakes.
Later, as rail supplanted water as the primary transportation method, Chicago-area entrepreneurs
funneled the nation’s railroad system through the city. This solidified Chicago’s position as the pri-
mary nexus of midcontinental commodity grading, processing, and transshipment.
As the center point of commodity transshipment, Chicago had obvious and abundant opportunities
to “make the markets” in these same commodities and to serve as the headquarters for the emergent
companies who were trading, financing, and distributing these goods. Chicago’s businessmen capi-
talized on these opportunities by adapting such innovations as grain elevators and refrigerated
freight cars to transport dressed beef to eastern markets. Notably, the city’s leaders also advanced
public and quasi-public institutions, including membership commodity exchanges, wholesale goods
exchanges, trade shows, a world’s fair, and permanent merchandise showcase facilities.
Not only could the city move materials in and ship products out, it also could move its residents to
work sites. These abilities combined to make Chicago a great manufacturing powerhouse. Chicago’s
early-20th-century legacy of industries—including steel, meatpacking, clothing, food processing,
and machinery—all derived from the city’s transportation advantages and location. Both the materi-
al- and people-moving requirements of these industries were enormous. Manufacturing operations
then were not the sparsely manned operations that we know today. Large numbers of workers were
necessary to move and transform material. By 1890, Chicago had welcomed more than a million peo-
ple into its borders, making it the second-largest city in the country. While the city was relatively
efficient at moving all of these people to their jobs and moving all of the goods they produced, the
tasks were never easy, and they often resulted in severe strains on the transportation infrastructure
and rights of way.
In other words, from an urban-planning and growth-management perspective, many of the planning
and public-service challenges and conflicts of today were already evident early on. The city’s trans-
portation network ran through land that was scarce, often swampy, and sometimes disease plagued.
And the network was perpetually congested funneling commodities through the city in all directions.
At the same time, Chicago’s commercial district soon housed one of the world’s primary office cen-
ters, where office workers shared and transmitted business information face-to-face and met togeth-
er in newly invented skyscraper buildings to discuss and sometimes agree on business and financial
deals. And so, office workers commuted over or across the same roads and rights-of-way as freight.
Here, innovations such as the elevated rail transit system as well as much planning and public dis-
cussion were needed to bring workers from their residences to downtown.
In looking back on this era, we tend to celebrate Chicago’s planning achievements. But at the same
time, it is also widely recognized that Chicago was a place ill-prepared to house and serve its in-
migration of workers, many of whom were undereducated and, somewhat akin to today, spoke differ-
ent languages. So too, freight transportation bottlenecks and inefficiencies, and ultimately lost
opportunities, were no less prominent. Rapid economic growth in the Midwest and nation at large
456 Michael Moskow Speeches 2007
helped Chicago cover up mistakes and lost opportunities, but the slowing of growth brings them to
the fore.
In looking at today’s Chicagoland economy, it seems clear that we are in no position to let opportu-
nities slip by for want of foresight and regionwide initiative. The strong growth environment of the
19th and early-20th century is no longer in force to paper over public-policy mistakes. And in an
information-based economy where natural and manmade borders are seemingly insignificant,
Chicago can’t rely on its location to help attract businesses. As a result, the nature of our planning
must be more creative and less reactive than in the past.
Over the past 40 years or more, Chicago’s performance has been lagging in relation to surging cities
in the South and West, especially metropolitan areas of the Sunbelt and Pacific Northwest. Chicago
has surrendered its second-city status to Los Angeles. And while Chicago-area personal incomes
have been rising along with the national standard of living, Chicago’s relative standard of living has
been slipping in comparison to the national average. In 1970, per capita income in Chicago was 20
percent higher than the national average; now it’s only 11 percent higher.
Chicago’s past public policies are not the primary driver for its failure to keep up with these regions,
though I think that we could all find some fault in some instances. In particular, as the Chicago Fed
concluded in 1997 in our assessment of the Midwest economy, there is no greater determinant of
regional growth and prosperity than the education and skills of its people and workforce. Yet today
in Chicago and around the Midwest, policy makers still struggle to improve educational outcomes for
many inner-city children who are ill-equipped to move into the workforce or on to higher education.
But the lagging economic performance of the Chicago metropolitan area also largely reflects struc-
tural shifts in the nation’s economy and in its broad economic geography. The Midwest’s natural
resources as we knew them were superseded or depleted. In addition, while technological changes
fostered rapid growth in the region’s capacity to produce both manufactured goods and agricultural
crops, technological progress has also meant significant labor savings and relatively less growth in
demand for midwestern and Chicago production workers. To be sure, falling prices for midwestern
goods have helped lift standards of living for American households. But at the same time, there has
been so far insufficient offsetting growth in the demand for midwestern products. As a result, the
region has not kept pace with the rest of the country.
In sum, the Chicago region generally finds itself as the business capital city of a slowly growing
region rather than a rapidly growing one. The city continues to function well as the distributor, fin-
ancier, and business-service provider of the surrounding Midwest, but this has not been sufficient to
sustain economic growth at national standards.
This is not to say the Chicago region is without promising prospects. The region has expanded many
of its business lines and become a national and global market maker in several important arenas.
Chicago remains a headquarters city for national and global companies, second only to New York.
Chicago’s tourism trade is on the rise, while the city continues to stand out as a host to business
meetings and conventions. Chicago’s financial-service industries, especially the risk-market
exchanges and clearinghouses, have recently revived and continue to flourish, serving as a key plat-
form for global trading. The city’s business-service industries and segments of the legal sector are also
prominent. Its premier universities serve a global clientele, as do many of its health professionals, clinics,
Michael Moskow Speeches 2007 457
and hospitals. Perhaps most importantly, Chicago has crafted a diverse and high-quality environment
that has the potential to attract many of the world’s most creative and entrepreneurial people.
And so today, although Chicago has experienced upheaval due to technological change and global-
ization, it also has significant new opportunities. Depending on its own actions, Chicago can either
maintain its limited status and growth as the business capital of the Midwest, or it can adapt to the
changing economy and further its global importance. In this, Chicago could become the portal that
helps revive the surrounding Midwest.
In order to help Chicago reach its full potential as a global and national city, I think it’s most impor-
tant to recognize that Chicago’s physical needs have changed. How we live and work requires an ever-
increasing amount of physical circulation of workers—especially professional and knowledge work-
ers. Skilled workers often find it more productive to continue to commute from home to office to
exchange information, despite having the technical ability to work at home with the Internet and
personal computers. Such information is often ambiguous, in the sense that it must be interpreted
and often creatively advanced through business meetings face-to-face, often in a group setting, and
often with rapidly changing groups of people located far and wide. As urban economist Ed Glaeser
stated during his recent visit to Chicago, technical advances have only magnified the value of face-
to-face communication. In today’s information economy and in its advanced information industries,
“who we converse with on the Internet are also those who we find we must meet with face-to-face.”
Accordingly, overland commuting and transport are more important then ever.
As I’m sure you’ll recognize, in many sectors such as high technology, the arts, and finance, these meet-
ings may be casual rather than prearranged. This means that the global city that hosts conventions,
conferences, and the trendy arts, café or nightlife scene is even more amenable to value-creating ideas.
In this information-rich business environment, as Chicago strives to become a city that functions
above or in a league with other global cities, the implications for commodious ground transport and
residential access for such opportunities are compelling. Within the metropolitan area, the structure
and direction of such workplace trips has changed mightily. Chicago’s employment centers have
expanded well beyond the Loop and are now widespread. Our transportation system was designed
well to move workers from the suburbs to the Loop, but it has been strained as more people find
themselves commuting from Naperville to Schaumburg, or leaving their office in Palatine for a meet-
ing in Lake Forest. For the city to work well, it requires key infrastructure such as highways and
land-use planning that promotes circulation of people in getting around. Both ground and intercity
transportation must be accommodated and eased to facilitate travel for workplace, residential, and
recreational wants and needs.
In this, it almost goes without saying that some regionwide planning of infrastructure and land use
will be needed for Chicago to reach its potential. To take the case of ground transportation, the met-
ropolitan area’s transportation grid functions as a network of interconnected pipes rather than as a
set of autonomous parts. A traffic accident or delay on any major artery affects the entire system.
While the region’s transportation agencies correctly tend to view the Chicago-area transportation
grid as an integrated network, local governments sometimes have perspectives that run counter to
the needs of the regional transportation grid. A local community may be more interested in provid-
ing its residents with easy access to the regional transportation grid than easing egress across its own
458 Michael Moskow Speeches 2007
community. Many of us like to live on suburban cul-de-sacs, for example. But as we all locate our
homes on them, we become flustered as we exit our neighborhoods into gridlock traffic congestion.
So too, overly local land-use decisions for housing can unduly raise living costs. In particular, in their
planning and zoning decisions, individual communities sometimes promote the size and type of hous-
ing that appears, on the face of it, to maximize local property values. Yet in many instances, local
property values and economic growth in the aggregate region can often be enhanced by more-concert-
ed and comprehensive regionwide consideration of access to transportation and jobs. Failure to plan
transportation and land use regionwide can impede a critical asset of large cities, the close matching
of specialized and skilled workers with the unique labor demands of diverse big-city employers.
But ready access and ample circulation is no less important for the city’s less-skilled workforce. For
example, high-income communities in the Chicago area sometimes use local land-use authority to
exclude or impede higher density, more-affordable housing, often leading to broad sections of the
metropolitan area that become overly segmented by income. In turn, this segmentation burdens the
lower-income workers who have to make longer commutes, hurts everyone else due to the increased
congestion, and increases the difficulty businesses face in attracting and retaining workers. The
overall result is relatively slower growth in the regional economy.
Traffic congestion rises along with longer commuting distances, thereby lowering the city’s produc-
tivity. And as we all know, our auto and bus commuting times have increased significantly in recent
years—I know my commute takes 10 to 15 minutes longer than it did when I started at the Chicago
Fed in the mid-1990s. By one recent study, the average Chicago commuter spends 58 hours per year
stuck in rush-hour delays, up from 42 hours in 1990. As a result of such disconnects between over-
ly local decision making and the broader regional interests, the successful tables in large metropoli-
tan areas are being set through broad discussions of how local land use affects the whole.
But for today’s city that aspires to be globally successful, the benefits of maximum circulation of peo-
ple go beyond timely and low-cost access from home to job. Physical access and contact play a large
part in bringing about cultural acceptance and hopefully a productive blending of people and ideas
in the commercial arena. In science and in commerce, so often the productive breakthrough and
value generation comes about from the synthesis of diverse ideas and fields. Accordingly, large
diverse cities such as Chicago are potentially advantaged in generating value-added in commerce. But
potential will only give way to success if the region can productively bring about the abundant cir-
culation and contact among its diverse peoples and ideas so that the scope of Chicago’s innovation
network can grow apace. The new ideas that propel today’s economy are often borne of diverse view-
points and cultures.
While the Chicago economy has been transforming into a more information-based service economy,
its planning challenges are sharpened by its having one large foot in its previous form—manufactur-
ing and freight transportation. Both distribution and wholesaling activities remain outsized in the
Chicago area. Recently, with heightened global trade from the Pacific Rim to the U.S., Chicago-area
freight transportation has grown rapidly and is projected to continue to do so. And so, new opportu-
nities will emerge as the Panama Canal has reached its maximum capacity, potentially channeling
more freight overland across the U.S. and through and around the Chicago area.
Michael Moskow Speeches 2007 459
Chicago’s vast capabilities in this arena generate significant local income in its own right. A recent
Metropolis 2020 study reports 37,000 jobs in Chicago’s railroad freight industry alone. But in addi-
tion, Chicago’s highly developed distribution system creates many more opportunities for additional
manufacturing and distribution activity in both Chicago and the surrounding Midwest. As Chicago’s
historical development shows, access to freight often goes hand-in-hand with the ability to assemble
and further process the content of that freight.
However, as Chicago’s economy shifts toward high-valued service production and away from freight-
laden manufacturing, the value of Chicago’s existing roadways to bring workers to and from their
offices is rising in relation to their value for moving goods around and through Chicago. With only
limited land and infrastructure, can the region realize the full scope of its opportunities?
Even with some concerted and likely expensive actions to expand and reconfigure infrastructure,
there does not appear to be room for all roadway and rail traffic. Building roadway capacity to serve
all possible traffic is not an option. To do so would be too expensive in both construction costs and
in taking up limited urban land. Yet given its lagging growth opportunities, the region will want to
act to maximize its ability to handle as much freight and human traffic as possible. And so, in addi-
tion to some expansion of transportation capacity, the region will need to make difficult and judi-
cious decisions on the most critical infrastructure to repair and build. So too, the region will need to
engage in more efficient planning on the location of housing and commercial activity in order to
economize on overall travel demand.
To be sure, more rational operational and pricing policies, which allocate existing transportation
infrastructure, will also need to be adopted. Creative pricing policies that charge freight users for
roads and rail can help to more effectively use our limited roadway capacity and allocate it toward its
highest-value use. For example, the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority now charges higher road-use
fees for trucks during peak traffic times in and around Chicago. At the same time, electronic payment
of tolls helps to speed both cars and trucks through highway toll stations, and the CTA/Pace system
has also successfully adopted electronic fare cards. Now, if only we could move further along to seam-
lessly include the Metra rail system in the electronic payments system! And as we do look ahead, to
new and expanded payment technologies, we should also be expansive and strategic in our thinking.
Because our travel and general purchases are also varied and geographically broad in scope, we do not
want to end up with too many plastic cards and transponders in our overcoats and wallets.
In looking for further efficiency improvements in our payments systems, policy makers in the
Chicago region should examine a host of models and experiments from around the world that are now
pricing highway driving privileges for trucks and cars, often in combination with privatized owner-
ship or operation of transportation infrastructure. The recently proposed federal budget includes
grant funding for local experimentation on congestion pricing. Working with Metropolis 2020, the
Chicago Fed will be examining ways to use pricing policies through various personal transit tech-
nologies at a conference to be held June 12 here in Chicago.
The Chicago metropolitan area is in the process of transforming itself from an industrial metropolis
and a regional business service center into a global business capital. In this, Chicago cannot afford
to lose its legacy of industry and freight, nor can it afford to take its eyes off its narrow path as an
emergent city on the global network of information-intensive service industries. Chicago’s perform-
460 Michael Moskow Speeches 2007
ance in supporting these industries will depend not only on the quality and extent of its global con-
nections, but also on its “local” or “inside” performance. That is, how well can the region provide
its workers and businesses with opportunities for work, learning, and recreation?
In raising Chicago’s performance to global standards, we come together here today in one of the
many conversations that we will be having as a region going forward. With the initial impetus of the
Metropolis Project and the recent foresight of the Illinois legislature, CMAP has been created to con-
vene such conversations, collaborative efforts, and the way forward for the Chicago region. CMAP’s
specific charges are to integrate land use and transportation planning, identify and promote region-
al priorities, prepare a financial plan for transportation investments, and provide a policy framework
for the billions of dollars spent each year on infrastructure and planning in the Chicago region.
These are tall orders: to strike the right balance between the valued local autonomy—which helps to
makes each of us an active and motivated citizen in our community—with the larger regionwide and
global perspectives that make our local decisions truly useful and productive.
Michael Moskow Speeches 2007 461
Cite this document
APA
Michael Moskow (2007, February 5). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070206_michael_moskow
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20070206_michael_moskow,
author = {Michael Moskow},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2007},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070206_michael_moskow},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}