Detroit becomes biggest U.S. city to file for bankruptcy

Detroit becomes biggest U.S. city to file for bankruptcy

PanARMENIAN.Net - Detroit, once the symbol of American industrial might, has become the biggest U.S. city to file for bankruptcy, its finances ravaged and its neighbourhoods hollowed out by a long, slow decline in population and car making, Belfast Telegraph reported.

The federal bankruptcy court filing, which had been feared for months, conserves cash so the city can operate but it will hurt Detroit's image for years. It could mean shedding municipal workers, selling off assets, raising fees and scaling back basic services such as rubbish collection and snow ploughing, which have already been slashed.

Kevin Orr, a bankruptcy expert hired by the state in March to stop Detroit's fiscal free-fall, chose bankruptcy over diverting money from police, fire and other services to make debt payments. For decades, Detroit paid its bills by borrowing money while struggling to provide the most basic of services for its residents. "Only one feasible path offers a way out," Michigan governor Rick Snyder said in a letter approving the bankruptcy filing.

It took decades of decay to bring down the industrial giant that put the world on wheels. The city grew to 1.8 million people in the 1950s, luring them with plentiful jobs and paid good wages to stamp out automobile for sale across the globe. But like many American cities, Detroit's fall began late that decade as developers starting building suburbs. At the same time, auto companies began opening plants in other cities, and the rise of cars imported from Japan started to cut the size of the U.S. vehicle industry.

Detroit's property values fell, tax revenue dropped, police could not control a growing murder rate, and many middle-class blacks fled the city for safer suburbs with better schools. Detroit lost a quarter of a million residents between 2000 and 2010. Today it's barely above 700,000. Much of the middle-class and scores of businesses also have fled the city, taking their tax dollars with them.

The city is littered with abandoned factories built in the postwar boom years, most of which have multiple stories. As the Japanese auto invasion began cutting into Detroit's sales, General Motors, Chrysler, Ford and hundreds of car parts companies looked outside the city to build one-storey plants that could handle modern assembly lines. By the time the car industry melted down in 2009, along with the economy as a whole, only a few factories from GM and Chrysler were left. GM is the only one with headquarters in Detroit.

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