Bloomberg.com: Learning from Oklahoma City
April 15th, 2009A nice, lengthy article at Bloomberg.com on the lessons Oklahoma City learned from the Penn Square Bank collapse and how that may have helped us avoid some of the same mistakes in this current recession:
April 15 (Bloomberg) — Oklahoma City has plenty of experience with banking crises. That’s helping it avoid most of the fallout from this one.
The 1982 failure of Penn Square Bank, based in an Oklahoma City shopping center, triggered a national crisis and a decade of economic misery for the area. So many banks went down that locals dubbed Oklahoma City “Home of the FDIC,” the federal agency that seizes insolvent institutions.
In the aftermath, the city rebuilt its economy on the basis of careful lending practices, diversified industries and debt- free public projects — the kind of approach disdained in many other parts of the country, local leaders say. Now, Oklahoma City’s unemployment rate, 5.6 percent, is the second-lowest of any U.S. metropolitan area; median home prices have increased every year since 2004, even as other Sunbelt cities are posting year-over-year declines of 30 percent or more.
“We’re growing at a nice clip; it’s very slow, very steady and very solid,” said Mayor Mick Cornett. “I will admit that when I saw what was going on in Phoenix and Las Vegas years ago, I was envious. But I call that crazy growth.”
Continue reading the full article at: Bloomberg.com