Detroit hosted the Creative Cities 2.0 summit this week. Headliner Richard Florida used the event to suggest that the crisis shaking Wall Street and Main Street signifies a new era in America when local talent way matter most.
Arnold Weinfeld, the Michigan Municipal League’s director of public policy, listened carefully. Here are some of his conclusions posted on the MML blog…
John Howkins is one of the first to publish ideas on creativity and innovation in the 2001 work, The Creative Economy, and a consultant who has worked in over 30 countries—most recently in China. He began by noting how China will achieve in 30 years, the kind of urbanization it took Europe nearly 2,000 years. Howkins said the creative economy sees more failures than the service or manufacturing economies and that global competition in the 21st century is minds vs minds and copyright vs copyright, or minds working with other minds. He set forth his principles of ‘creative ecology’ whereby everyone is considered to be creative; creativity needs freedom and freedom needs markets. Howkins said creativity is not simply art or innovation but imagination, dreams, new concepts, design, culture, style, and meaning.
… The world economic platform has changed to one in which brains are the new capital, not brawn. Those cities, states, regions, and countries that understand this and put in place systems that will encourage creative activity and growth in their communities will grow themselves.



