As in most other Super Cities, Los Angeles' economy is changing. Nothing new here. Things always change and churn -- particularly in a multicultural society such as Southern California, where the region's politics, economics and demography are best described by words like freedom, turbulence, innovation and choice.
There is, unfortunately, a strong tendency for people, including trained observers such as journalists and economists, to look at change and see decline.
As economist Joseph Schumpeter said, "Capitalism is a process of creative destruction." However, the press and the public tend to focus on the destruction side: jobs lost, hard-hit families and communities, people and firms moving out, relocating.
It is useful, from time to time, to look at both sides, including the creative side. That's what we did in a report to a group of CEOs assembled in Los Angeles last week to discuss "The Next L.A. Economy."
If we look at the two years just before the onset of the recession, we see a very vibrant, entrepreneurial economy. California created approximately 326,000 net new jobs -- i.e., subtracting out all the job losses and eliminating all jobs created by companies starting up or dying during this period. The breakdown of net new job growth is instructive.
What we see here is America's new economy in bold relief: small, locally owned companies producing most of the new jobs in manufacturing, business and professional services and wholesale trade. Our other Super Cities would do well to emulate this picture.

It’s better to wear out than rust out.” That is the message of Reboot! While American culture glamorizes the “Golden Years” of endless leisure and amusement, Phil Burgess rejects retirement, as he makes the case for returning to work in the post-career years, a time he calls later life.