Series: Metropolitan Recovery and Spending Priorities | Number 48 of 53 « Previous | Next »

May 11

Past Event

Metropolitan Demographics: A Decade on the Front Lines of Change

Event Materials

Video

Highlights

  • An Age of Urbanization

    Rodin says we're living in an age of urbanization and of rapid growth in metropolitan areas that's fueling a "demographic revolution." She says this trend can be beneficial if properly managed.

    Bruce Katz

  • Five Key Demographic Issues

    Katz identifies five key demographic issues that are changing the composition of our urban centers. He says each issue ultimately will have a profound impact on these metro areas.

    Bruce Katz

  • Demographic Changes As Drivers

    Katz says the demographic changes in our urban centers drive the challenges facing the nation: climate change, immigration and the economy - all are linked to what's going on in our metros.

    Bruce Katz

  • Immigration and National Security

    Immigration reform and national security are key issues, Nutter says, adding that his administration delivers services to all who request them regardless of their immigration status.

    Bruce Katz

  • The Importance of Education

    Nutter states that education is as important as national defense and says the federal government must do a better job in supporting state efforts to educate its young people.

    Bruce Katz

Audio

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Summary

From race and immigration to education and poverty, American society is in flux. Until public officials grasp the full dimension of how this nation has changed over the past decade, it will be nearly impossible to shape sound policies for the next ten years. An expert team of demographers, public policy analysts and economists has analyzed data from the last decade to identify critical challenges facing our nation in the years ahead, and to portray the complex metropolitan map against which those challenges will play out.

On Tuesday, May 11, the Metropolitan Policy Program at Brookings unveiled its State of Metropolitan America. The report documents a decade of dynamic economic and social change, and five key trends—population growth and outward expansion, growing racial and ethnic diversity, a large aging population, wide disparities in educational attainment, and polarizing incomes—that demand a renewed national public policy focus. These challenges differ dramatically in magnitude across the country’s 100 largest metropolitan areas, however, and compel local and regional leaders to confront the issues most pressing to them in ways that transcend the increasingly blurry socioeconomic lines between cities and suburbs.

Rockefeller Foundation President Judith Rodin introduced the report, and Brookings Vice President and Director of the Metropolitan Policy Program Bruce Katz presented its key findings. Following the presentation, leaders from government, business and educational sectors discussed the report’s implications for public policy, private markets, and the upcoming elections.

After the presentations, speakers took questions from the audience.

Details

May 11, 2010

9:30 AM - 12:00 PM EDT

The Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

(202) 797-6105

Event Agenda

  • Welcome

    • Edgar Rios

      Co-founder and Managing Director

      Wenzi Capital Partners

  • Opening Remarks

    • Judith Rodin

      President, Rockefeller Foundation

  • Presentation

    • Portrait: Bruce Katz

      Bruce Katz

      Vice President and Director

      Metropolitan Policy Program

  • Panel Discussion

    • Moderator: Roberto Suro

      Professor, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Southern California

      Nonresident Senior Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program

    • Ronald Brownstein

      Columnist, National Journal

    • Nancy Cantor

      Chancellor, Syracuse University

    • Jennie Chin Hansen

      Immediate Past President, AARP

      Chief Executive Officer, American Geriatrics Society

    • Abby Joseph Cohen

      President, Global Markets Initiative at Goldman Sachs

  • Closing Remarks

    • The Honorable Michael Nutter

      Mayor, City of Philadelphia

SERIES: Metropolitan Recovery and Spending Priorities | Number 48