Video: Kansas City: Genuinely World Class

State and Local Government |
By Wendell Cox | Read Time 1 minute
The climate is so-so, there’s no nearby ocean or mountain range, and the metro area population has climbed only modestly over the past 3½ decades. But Kansas City appears to be better positioned than other comparably sized U.S. cities for future growth and prosperity.
 
Urban policy expert Wendell Cox counts the ways. Housing is affordable – in part, he says, because land-use restrictions are minimal – and the overall cost of living is low. With an extensive freeway and arterial system and relatively uncongested traffic, people can get around. KC consequently attracts more “domestic migrants” than it loses. Cox details all of this in his essay Kansas City—Genuinely World Class.
 
Cox, the principal of Demographia, a St. Louis-area public policy and demographics firm, walks through the advantages and what Kansas City needs to do to preserve them in this presentation.

About the Author

Wendell Cox is a leading proponent of adopting land use and transport policies based on their effectiveness in improving standards of living and alleviating poverty. He is principal of Demographia (Wendell Cox Consultancy) in the St. Louis metropolitan area. He specializes in urban policy, transport, and demographics and is author of “Demographia World Urban Areas” and co-author of the Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey. He is also author of “Toward More Prosperous Cities,” a framing essay on urban areas, urban planning, urban transport, and sustainability. He has lectured widely and has consulted for public authorities and private companies in the United States, Canada, Europe, Asia, Australia, and New Zealand and for public policy organizations. He has served as visiting professor at the Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers (a national university) in Paris, in transport and demographics. He is contributing editor of newgeography.com, for which he writes a regular column. This includes “The Evolving Urban Form” series, which analyzes demographic trends in world urban areas. 

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