By Kurt Badenhausen, Forbes.com
February 2, 2012
Provided by:
Miami is a playground for the rich and famous. Celebrities flock to parties at
South Beach clubs and then return to their $10 million mansions in
Miami Beach and
Key Biscayne.
It’s a leading city in culture, finance and international trade. But
away from the glitz and glamor, many ordinary Miamians are struggling.
A crippling housing crisis has cost multitudes of residents their
homes and jobs. The metro area has one of the highest violent crime
rates in the country and workers face lengthy daily commutes. Add it all
up and Miami takes the top spot in our ranking of America’s Most
Miserable Cities.
In pictures: America's Most Miserable Cities
The most famous way to gauge misery is the Misery Index developed by
economist Arthur Okun in the 1960s, which combines unemployment and
inflation. Our take on misery is based on the things that people
complain about on a regular basis.
We looked at 10 factors for the 200 largest metro areas and divisions
in the U.S. Some are serious, like violent crime, unemployment rates,
foreclosures, taxes (income and property), home prices and political
corruption. Other factors we included are less weighty, like commute
times, weather and how the area’s pro sports teams did. While sports,
commuting and weather can be considered trivial by many, they can be the
determining factor in the level of misery for a significant number of
people. One tweak to this year’s list: we swapped out sales tax rates
for property tax rates. Miami would have finished No. 1 under the old
methodology as well.
Miami has local company in misery on our list: the West Palm Beach
metropolitan division ranks fourth and Fort Lauderdale is seventh. Both
areas have been hit hard by the housing crises.
Michigan’s troubled duo of
Detroit and
Flint
clock in at No. 2 and No. 3 among the most miserable cities. The cities
have been reeling for decades due to the decline of the U.S. auto
industry and in recent years have been demolishing houses to change
their city landscapes. Detroit has closed schools and
laid off police,
while Michigan appointed an emergency manager last year to take over
Flint’s budget and operations. Detroit and Flint rank No. 1 and No. 3
when it comes to violent crime, and unemployment over the past three
years in both communities has also been among the worst in the U.S.
Last year’s most miserable city,
Stockton,
ranks No. 11 this year. Stockton got a boost as housing prices have
stabilized to some degree after a 45% drop between 2006 and 2008. They
also benefited from our replacement of sales tax rates with property
taxes in the methodology (Stockton would have finished No. 6 under the
old methodology). Stockton still has plenty of problems, though. It
ranks among the country’s six worst when it comes to unemployment,
foreclosures and violent crime.
Here's a look at America's 10 most miserable cities:
10. Warren, MI
|
Photo: Getty Images |
The housing market collapsed in the Warren metro area, which includes
Troy and Farmington Hills. The median home price is down 50% over the
past three years, the second biggest drop in the U.S. after Detroit.
9. Rockford, IL
|
Photo: AP |
Property tax rates were fifth highest in the country in 2010. The
median tax bill was $3,234 on home values of $136,000 for a rate of
2.4%.
8. Toledo, OH
The city is ensnared in a scandal within its Department of
Neighborhoods that involves alleged bid rigging and stolen funds. The
FBI and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development are
investigating the crimes. Toledo scores poorly when it comes to income
and property tax rates.
7. Fort Lauderdale, FL
|
Photo: AP |
The spring break mecca has been hit hard by the housing downturn.
Median home prices in the metro division that includes Pompano Beach and
Deerfield Beach are down 50% since 2006 to a recent $183,000.
6. Chicago, IL
|
Winter weather is perceived to be an issue.
Photo: Getty Images |
The Windy City is a cultural and financial center, but its residents
must endure gridlock traffic, high property taxes and brutal winters.
Commute times to work average 31 minutes, eighth worst in the U.S.
5. Sacramento, CA
|
Photo: AP |
Sacramento’s lone pro sports team is flirting with a move to Anaheim
unless the city delivers financing for a new arena. Sac-Town might not
miss them. The team has lost 73% of its games since the start of the
2008-09 season. Foreclosures in California's capital were among the 10
highest last year.
4. West Palm Beach, FL
|
Photo: Getty Images |
South Florida has long been stained by corruption. One of the latest
examples: Jose Rodriguez, the mayor of Boynton Beach (part of the West
Palm metropolitan division) was suspended from his office last month by
Gov. Rick Scott after he was arrested for allegedly using his position
to obstruct a child abuse probe involving his wife's estranged daughter.
Home prices in the West Palm area are off 50% since 2006.
3. Flint, MI
Flint razed 775 abandoned homes in the year ending October 2011, to
try and change the city landscape. The state of Michigan appointed an
emergency manager last year to take over Flint's budget and operations.
Crime remains a severe problem with the violent crime rate the third
worst in the U.S.
2. Detroit, MI
|
Photo: Getty Images |
Detroit has closed schools and laid off police in an effort to avoid a
bankruptcy filing this year. Home prices are down 54% the past three
years, worst in the U.S. The median price was $38,000 last year in the
Detroit-Livonia-Dearborn metro division.
1. Miami, FL
|
Photo: Getty Images |
The housing crisis has devastated Miami with 47% of homeowners
sitting on underwater mortgages. Foreclosures have been rampant with
364,000 properties in the Miami area entering the foreclosure process
since 2008 according to RealtyTrac.
In pictures: America's Most Miserable Cities
Source(http://realestate.yahoo.com/promo/americas-most-miserable-cities-2012.html)
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