
Cities, possibly inspired by desperation or that last slice of pizza no one wants, are now looking beyond the traditional retail to keep their tax revenues from evaporating into thin air.
Ah, municipalities—the true superheroes of our economy, armed with the dreaded retail tax revenue. For decades, towns have bent over backward to attract new shops and safeguard their existing ones. Unfortunately, the retail landscape has changed so much, it’s practically a different planet now.
The sad truth? Cities and towns are learning that relying solely on sales tax revenue from retail is like relying on a diet of candy bars—unsustainable and likely to end in tears. With online shopping gaining traction, brick-and-mortar stores are becoming more like urban legends—fleeting and difficult to find. Statista reports that e-commerce revenue in the U.S. climbed from a meager 6% in 2013 to a whopping 15% by 2021. Hold onto your hats because they predict a dizzying 19% by 2024. What a ride!
And just when you thought it couldn’t get worse, the U.S. boasts the highest retail square footage per capita, with nearly 24 square feet per person. Impressive! If only we could do something more productive with all that space, like hosting the world’s largest indoor trampoline park. But alas, we have struggling shopping centers and more vacant retail locations than you can shake a stick at.
It seems our favorite over-stored country is ignoring the obvious: maybe it’s time to look beyond retail for some much-needed revenue. As city planners pull their hair out, they cling to the misguided belief that new retail can swoop in like Superman and save the day. Spoiler alert: it usually doesn’t.
Often, the true value lies not in the retail grandstands but in the real estate itself, which has hosted retail since the dawn of time. As cities face the harsh reality of vacant stores and sad shopping centers, it’s crucial for them to rethink their master plans. After all, those vacant retail spaces could make fantastic community gardens—or even a spectacular hole for a new dinosaur fossil exhibit!
For instance, imagine a shopping center turning into a vibrant community hub featuring multi-family housing, bustling medical facilities, or an illustrious new public library. Who doesn’t want to have their local grocery store next to a library? Just picture thrifty parents juggling their kids, grocery bags, and library books—it’s like a new Olympic sport!
Integrating non-retail uses can revitalize struggling shopping centers and truly transform them into centers of community life, right alongside that lingering sense of loss over your favorite clothes store that has now become a pet grooming salon. And who knows? Maybe the ghosts of retail past will bless us one day with an unexpected revival. Or they’ll just haunt the empty aisles. Either way, this is the new age of savvy city planning!