Desolate & devastated in America
K.P. Nayar drove along the world’s biggest trading route, from the US eastern shore to Detroit and across the Ambassador Bridge into Windsor, Canada, and saw the scars of downturn spread over 800km
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An electronics store offering a clearance sale before going out of business in Los Angeles on February 2. (AFP) |
That was the precise moment when it hit me: the extent and severity of the economic precipice on the edge of which America now stands.
I was running out of petrol on a highway that was until recently the artery of a staggering daily trade of $1.5 billion in goods between the US and Canada, 70 per cent of which was transported by trucks.
Today, as businesses fold up every day across the US, there is no petrol or diesel to be bought for an entire stretch of 184km on this highway in a once-prosperous part of Pennsylvania.
Every outlet that sold automobile fuel on this once-busy stretch has closed down. And along with it, businesses at “service centres” on this highway that hawked everything from lottery tickets and contraceptives — sought mainly by truck drivers — to Starbucks coffee and Big Macs have folded up.
Every outlet that sold automobile fuel on this once-busy stretch has closed down. And along with it, businesses at “service centres” on this highway that hawked everything from lottery tickets and contraceptives — sought mainly by truck drivers — to Starbucks coffee and Big Macs have folded up.
The highway, known as the Penna Turnpike, begins in Breezewood, Pennsylvania, where I regularly fill up my car at a Citgo pump owned by Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela.
But no more Citgo in Breezewood, a town that lives off truckers who ferry goods across the US and onward to Canada. First the Texas-based refining arm of Venezuela’s state-run oil company gave up the outlet because of falling sales. But the new franchisee could not stay in business for more than a year.
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