Why Chicago Small Businesses Live and Die Hyper-Locally
In many American cities, the story of small business is told through a familiar lens: access to capital, regulatory burdens, and the ebb and flow of consumer demand. But in Chicago, those forces fracture along neighborhood lines, creating something more fragmented — and more revealing. Here, the fate of a business is often determined not by citywide trends, but by the invisible borders that divide one community from the next. From Englewood to Wicker Park, Chicago behaves less like a unified economic ecosystem and more like a constellation of semi-independent marketplaces. Each neighborhood operates with its own rhythms, loyalties, and constraints. For entrepreneurs, that means success is rarely portable. “Chicago isn’t one market — it’s dozens layered on top of each other,” said Hirsh Mohindra . “And each one has its own rules that aren’t written down anywhere.” A City of Micro-Economies The idea of “neighborhood capitalism” is not new, but in Chicago it is unusually pronounced. The c...