Category: Politics

  • Death of the California Dream

    For decades, California has epitomized America’s economic strengths: technological excellence, artistic creativity, agricultural fecundity and an intrepid entrepreneurial spirit. Yet lately California has projected a grimmer vision of a politically divided, economically stagnant state. Last week its legislature cut a deal to close its $42 billion budget deficit, but its larger problems remain.

    California has returned from the dead before, most recently in the mid-1990s. But the odds that the Golden State can reinvent itself again seem long. The buffoonish current governor and a legislature divided between hysterical greens, public-employee lackeys and Neanderthal Republicans have turned the state into a fiscal laughingstock. Meanwhile, more of its middle class migrates out while a large and undereducated underclass (much of it Latino) faces dim prospects. It sometimes seems the people running the state have little feel for the very things that constitute its essence — and could allow California to reinvent itself, and the American future, once again.

    The facts at hand are pretty dreary. California entered the recession early last year, according to the Forecast Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and is expected to lag behind the nation well into 2011. Unemployment stands at roughly 10 percent, ahead only of Rust Belt basket cases like Michigan and East Coast calamity Rhode Island. Not surprisingly, people are fleeing this mounting disaster. Net outmigration has been growing every year since about 2003 and should reach well over 200,000 by 2011. This outflow would be far greater, notes demographer Wendell Cox, if not for the fact that many residents can’t sell their homes and are essentially held prisoner by their mortgages.

    For Californians, this recession has been driven by different elements than the early-1990s downturn, which was largely caused by external forces. The end of the Cold War stripped away hundreds of thousands of well-paid defense-related jobs. Meanwhile, the Japanese economy went into a tailspin, leading to a massive disinvestment here. In South L.A., the huge employment losses helped create the conditions conducive to social unrest. The 1992 Rodney King verdict may have provided the match, but the kindling was dry and plentiful.

    This time around, the recession feels like a self-inflicted wound, the result of “bubble dependency.” First came the dotcom bubble, centered largely in the Bay Area. The fortunes made there created an enormous surge in wealth, but by 2001 that bust had punched a huge hole in the California budget. Voters, disgusted by the legislature’s inability to cope with the crisis, recalled the governor, Gray Davis, and replaced him with a megastar B-grade actor from Austria.

    Yet almost as soon as the Internet bubble had evaporated, a new one emerged in housing. As prices soared in coastal enclaves, people fled to the periphery, often buying homes far from traditional suburban job centers. At first, it seemed like a miraculous development: people cheered as their home’s “value” increased 20 percent annually. But even against the backdrop of the national housing bubble, California soon became home to gargantuan imbalances between incomes and property prices. The state was also home to such mortgage hawkers as New Century Financial Corp., Countrywide and IndyMac. For a time the whole California economy seemed to revolve around real-estate speculation, with upwards of 50 percent of all new jobs coming from growth in fields like real estate, construction and mortgage brokering.

    As a result, when the housing bubble burst, the state’s huge real-estate economy evaporated almost overnight. Both parties in the legislature and the governor failed miserably to anticipate the impending fiscal deluge they should have known was all but inevitable.

    To many longtime California observers, the inability of the political, business and academic elites to adequately anticipate and address the state’s persistent problems has been a source of consternation and wonderment. In my view, the key to understanding California’s precipitous decline transcends terms like liberal or conservative, Democratic and Republican. The real culprit lies in the politics of narcissism.

    California, like any gorgeously endowed person, has a natural inclination toward self-absorption. It has always been a place of unsurpassed splendor; it has inspired and attracted writers, artists, dreamers, savants and philosophers. That’s especially true of the Bay Area—ground zero for California narcissism and arguably the most attractive urban expanse on the continent; Neil Morgan in 1960 described San Francisco as “the narcissus of the West,” a place whose fundamental asset was first its own beauty, followed by its own culture of self-regard.

    At first this high self-regard inspired some remarkable public achievements. California rebuilt San Francisco from the ashes of the great 1906 fire, and constructed in Los Angeles the world’s most far-reaching transit system. These achievements reached a pinnacle under Gov. Pat Brown, who in the 1960s oversaw the expansion of the freeways, the construction of new university, state- and community-college campuses, and the creation of water projects that allowed farming in dry but fertile landscapes.

    Yet success also spoiled the state, incubating an ever more inward-looking form of narcissism. Even as the middle class enjoyed “the good life” — high-paying jobs, single-family homes (often with pools), vacations at the beach — there was a growing, palpable sense of threats from rising taxes, a restless youth population and a growing nonwhite demographic. One early expression of this was the late-1970s antitax movement led by Howard Jarvis. The rising cost of government was placing too much of a burden on middle-class homeowners, and the legislature refused to address the problem with reasonable reforms. The result, however, was unreasonable reform, with new and inflexible limits on property and income taxes that made holding the budget together far more difficult.

    Middle-class Californians also began to feel inundated by a racial tide. This was not totally based on prejudice; Californians seemed to accept legal immigration. But millions of undocumented newcomers provoked fear that there were no limits on how many people would move into the state, filling emergency rooms with the uninsured and crowding schools with children whose parents neither spoke English nor had the time to prepare their children for school. By 1994, under Gov. Pete Wilson, the anti-immigrant narcissism fueled Proposition 187. It was now OK to deny school and medical services to people because, at the end, they looked different.

    Today the politics of narcissism is most evident among “progressives.” Although the Republicans can still block massive tax increases, the predominant force in California politics lies with two groups — the gentry liberals and the public sector. The public-sector unions, once relatively poorly paid, now enjoy wages and benefits unavailable to most middle-class Californians, and do so with little regard to the fiscal and overall economic impact. Currently barely 3 percent of the state budget goes to building roads or water systems, compared with nearly 20 percent in the Pat Brown era; instead we’re funding gilt-edged pensions and lifetime guaranteed health care. It’s often a case of I’m all right, Jack — and the hell with everyone else.

    The most recent ascendant group are the gentry liberals, whose base lies in the priciest precincts of San Francisco, the Silicon Valley and the west side of Los Angeles. Gentry liberalism reflects the narcissistic values of successful boomers and their offspring; their politics are all about them. In the past this was tied as much to cultural issues, like gay rights (itself a noble cause) and public support for the arts. More recently, the dominant issue revolves around environmentalism.

    Green politics came early to California and for understandable reasons: protecting the resources and beauty of the nation’s loveliest landscapes. Yet in recent years, the green agenda has expanded well beyond that of the old conservationists like Theodore Roosevelt, who battled to preserve wilderness but also cared deeply about boosting productivity and living standards for the working classes. In contrast, the modern environmental movement often adopts a largely misanthropic view of humans as a “cancer” that needs to be contained. By their very nature, the greens tend to regard growth as an unalloyed evil, gobbling up resources and spewing planet-heating greenhouse gases.

    You can see the effects of the gentry’s green politics up close in places like the Salinas Valley, a lovely agricultural region south of San Jose. As community leaders there have tried to construct policies to create new higher-wage jobs in the area (a project on which I’ve worked as a consultant), local progressives — largely wealthy people living on the Monterey coast — have opposed, for example, the expansion of wineries that might bring new jobs to a predominantly Latino area with persistent double-digit unemployment. As one winegrower told me last year: “They don’t want a facility that interferes with their viewshed.” For such people, the crusade against global warming makes a convenient foil in arguing against anything that might bring industrial or any other kind of middle-wage growth to the state. Greens here often speak movingly about the earth — but also about their personal redemption. They have engaged a legal and regulatory process that provides the wealthy and their progeny an opportunity to act out their desire to “make a difference” — often without real concern for the outcome. Environmentalism becomes a theater in which the privileged act out their narcissism.

    It’s even more disturbing that many of the primary apostles of this kind of politics are themselves wealthy high-livers like Hollywood magnates, Silicon Valley billionaires and well-heeled politicians like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jerry Brown. They might imagine that driving a Prius or blocking a new water system or new suburban housing development serves the planet, but this usually comes at no cost to themselves or their lifestyles.

    The best great hope for California’s future does not lie with the narcissists of left or right but with the newcomers, largely from abroad. These groups still appreciate the nation of opportunity and aspire to make the California — and American — Dream their own.

    Of course, companies like Google and industries like Hollywood remain critical components, but both Silicon Valley and the entertainment complex are now mature, and increasingly dominated by people with access to money or the most elite educations. Neither is likely to produce large numbers of new jobs, particularly for working- and middle-class Californians.

    In contrast, the newcomers, who often lack both money and education, continue in the hierarchy-breaking tradition that made California great in the first place. Many of them live and build their businesses not in places like San Francisco or West L.A., but in the increasingly multicultural suburbs on the periphery, places like the San Gabriel Valley, Riverside and Cupertino. Immigrants played a similar role in the recovery from the early-1990s doldrums. In the ’90s, for example, the number of Latino-owned businesses already was expanding at four times the rate of Anglo ones, growing from 177,000 to 440,000. Today we see signs of much the same thing, though it often involves immigrants from the Middle East, the former Soviet Union, Mexico or South Korea. One developer, Alethea Hsu, just opened a new shopping center in the San Gabriel Valley this January — and it’s fully leased. “We have a great trust in the future,” says the Cornell-trained physician.

    You see some of the same thing among other California immigrants. More than three decades ago the Cardenas family started slaughtering and selling pigs grown on their two-acre farm near Corona. From there, Jesús Sr. and his wife, Luz, expanded. “We would shoot the hogs through the head and sell them off the truck,” says José, their son. “We’d sell the meat to people who liked it fresh: Filipinos, Chinese, Koreans and Hispanics…We would sell to anyone.” Their first store, predominantly a carnicería, or meat shop, took advantage of the soaring Latino population. By 2008, they had 20 stores with more than $400 million in sales. In 2005 they started to produce Mexican food, including some inspired by Luz’s recipes to distribute through such chains as Costco. Mexican food, notes Jesús Jr., is no longer a niche. “It’s a crossover product now.”

    Despite the current mess in Sacramento, this suggests some hope for the future. Perhaps the gubernatorial candidacy of Silicon Valley folks like former eBay CEO Meg Whitman (a Republican), or her former eBay employee Steve Wesley (a Democrat), could bring some degree of competence and common sense to the farce now taking place in Sacramento. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who’s said to be considering the race, would also be preferable to a green zealot like Jerry Brown or empty suits like Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa or San Francisco’s Gavin Newsom.

    But if I am looking for hope and inspiration, for California or the country, I would look first and foremost at people like the Cardenas family. They create jobs for people who didn’t go to Stanford or whose parents lack a trust fund. They constitute what any place needs to survive: risk takers who are self-confident but rarely selfish. These are people who look at the future, not in the mirror.

    This article originally appeared at Newsweek.

    Joel Kotkin is executive editor of NewGeography.com and is a presidential fellow in urban futures at Chapman University. He is author of The City: A Global History and is finishing a book on the American future.

  • Responsible Home Buyers, Why Be Frugal?

    I was laying in bed this morning, listening to discussions of the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan, the 2009 version of a Homeowner Bailout. (The 2008 version was spent on the banks.) I listened closely because I had to decide if it was worth getting out of bed to earn the money to pay my mortgage or not. Like all those bankers that got a bailout, I was wondering if it might be worth more to me to default on my mortgage than to pay it. I mean, what if the only people getting bailed out are the ones who truly screwed up? Being right doesn’t mean being rich and I didn’t want to miss out.

    I realized that I’d have to get out of bed and get to the office anyway if I was going to make sense of this Plan. Radio sound bites are no substitute for real research. Timmy Geithner put several documents up on his website. Much like his plan to print $2.5 trillion, it’s still more rhetoric than reality but at least this time they included lots of number, so I’m happy to rifle through it.

    Step one in the Fact Sheet is “Refinancing for Up to 4 to 5 Million Responsible Homeowners to Make Their Mortgages More Affordable.” The Plan offers an example of a family with a $207,000 30-year fixed rate mortgage at 6.5%. The house value has fallen 15% to $221,000 so they have less than the 20% home equity needed to qualify for current mortgage rates (close to 5%). The lower interest rate would save this homeowner $2,300/year in mortgage payments.

    First of all, this homeowner’s monthly mortgage payment is $1,308 –about 8.6% of all mortgages fall into this range. About 60% of mortgages are below that level. If the mortgage is too much bigger than that, they are into “jumbo” territory in a lot of areas, so we’ll say this plan is directed at the lower 60%. The example of a $260,000 home is a little pricey – the median new home in 2008 was $226,000 and the median existing home price was $202,000.

    The lower price isn’t just because home prices are falling. The US median has never been higher than $247,900 except in places like New York and California. But the median home price has not skyrocketed in vast swaths of middle-class, middle-America. Finally, reducing your payments by $2,300 in a year means a monthly savings of about $200 – enough to cover a northern winter utility bill.

    If they reach the 4 million homeowners that they say they will, that’s 5.3% of all homeowners. But only 1.19% of all mortgages are in foreclosure and only 1.83% are 90 days past due. Maybe they are going to help the slow-pays, because 6.41% of all mortgages have some past due payments. President Obama specifically said that he was doing this to help regular, middle-class homeowners. That should not mean those who have homes worth more than the national median.

    Then there’s this 15% drop in home value in Geithner’s example. The national median fell 8.6% from 247,000 at the beginning of 2007 to $225,700 in the third quarter of 2008 (latest available from HUD). In the West, where California homes have a higher median than middle-America, the median new home price rose from $320,200 in 2007 to $414,400 at the end of 2008. That’s a whopping 29.4% increase in the median price for a new home! Eastern US median home prices did fall, but by 12.6% not 15%. Still, I wouldn’t be hard pressed to find a city or two or three where home prices fell by 12%. But it doesn’t appear that they will be middle-class homes in middle-America. Existing home prices have fallen across the board. But only in the West did these prices fall at an alarming rate. The average for the other regions was only 8.7%.

    Median Existing Home Price
    Period*
    US
    Northeast
    Midwest
    South
    West
    2007 219,000 279,100 165,100 179,300 335,000
    2008 191,600 246,800 152,500 167,200 253,600
    % change
    12.50% 11.60% 7.60% 6.70% 24.30%
    * 2008 is for September, latest available from HUD. 2007 is full year figure.

    Let’s look at the rest of the bill: “A $75 Billion Homeowner Stability Initiative to Reach Up to 3 to 4 Million At-Risk Homeowners.” This part is for those with adjustable-rate mortgages (“have seen their mortgage payments rise to 40 or even 50 percent of their monthly income”) and excludes those slow-pays (“before a borrower misses a payment”) that appear to be getting help from Part One. This Part is only available to those who have a high mortgage-to-income ratio and/or whose mortgage balance is higher than the current market value. Under the “Shared Effort to Reduce Monthly Payments” the federal government would step in to make some of your interest payments after the bank can’t reduce your interest rate any further.

    There’s nothing here that says you’ll have to pay the government back that money – ever. But if the interest rate reduction isn’t enough, and having the government make some of your interest payments still doesn’t get you down to a mortgage payment that is no more than 31% of your income (one of the definitions of affordable), then the government will even pay down some of your principal.

    But wait, that’s not all you get! If you and your bank can work out a deal here’s what else Uncle Obama will throw in for you:

    If you take this action
    The government pays Your Bank 
    The government pays You
    Do a loan modification
    $1,000
    Reduced interest costs and principal balance
    Do it before you miss a payment
    $500
    $1,500
    Stay current
    $3,000 (over 3 years)
    $5,000 (over 5 years)

    Wow! I’m really beginning to regret being a responsible person. I comment on Part 3 of the plan tomorrow. But this is really discouraging. I’m ineligible because I bought responsibly, before the Stimulus Bill gave out incentives to buy. I suspect there are about 70 million households out there just like me. Trillions of dollars running around the economy and all I can see is that the responsible majority will be paying for it while irresponsible bankers, brokers and home buyers benefit.

    To tell you the truth, I need a tissue…

    Read Part II of this look at the Housing Bailout.

    Susanne Trimbath, Ph.D. is CEO and Chief Economist of STP Advisory Services. Her training in finance and economics began with editing briefing documents for the Economic Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. She worked in operations at depository trust and clearing corporations in San Francisco and New York, including Depository Trust Company, a subsidiary of DTCC; formerly, she was a Senior Research Economist studying capital markets at the Milken Institute. Her PhD in economics is from New York University. In addition to teaching economics and finance at New York University and University of Southern California (Marshall School of Business), Trimbath is co-author of Beyond Junk Bonds: Expanding High Yield Markets.

  • A Tale of Two Blizzards

    January 1979 saw one of the worst blizzards in city history hit Chicago, dumping 20 inches of snow, closing O’Hare airport for 46 hours, and paralyzing traffic in the city for days. Despite the record snowfall, the city’s ineffectual response was widely credited for the defeat of Mayor Michael Bilandic in his re-election bid, leading to Jane Bryne becoming the city’s first female mayor.

    In January 1978, a similar blizzard had struck the city of Indianapolis, also burying the city in a record 20 inches of snow. Mayor Bill Hudnut stayed awake nearly two days straight, coordinating the response and frequently updating the city on the snow fighting efforts through numerous media appearances. Nevertheless, the airport closed and it was several days before even major streets were passable. But when it was all over, Hudnut emerged a folk hero and went on to become arguably the most popular mayor in city history, serving four terms before voluntarily stepping aside.

    While major snow is much less frequent in Indianapolis than Chicago, and Hudnut’s response certainly bettered Bilandic’s, these twin blizzards illustrate a powerful difference in citizen expectations between these two cities, reflecting two of the broad approaches to urban service provision in America today.

    People in Chicago expect and demand high quality public services. Chicago is the “City that Works”, and woe be to the mayor when it doesn’t. That’s why every mayor since Bilandic has treated snow clearance like a military operation, deploying a division of armored snow trucks to assault the elements at the merest hint of a flake, often leaving more salt than snow in their wake. If Chicagoans pay relatively higher taxes than the rest of the country, at least its citizens know that they are getting something for their money, whether it be snow clearance, garbage collection, street lighting, landscaped boulevards, or bike lanes.

    In Indianapolis, by contrast, public services are not the main concern. People gripe if snow is not cleared, but are not outraged. No Indianapolis mayor ever lost his job for failing to deliver good services. Rather, taxes have always been the primary issue. Nothing illustrates this better than the most recent mayoral election. Buoyed by an emerging demographic super-majority, a large campaign war chest, and the support of almost every establishment figure of both parties, Mayor Bart Peterson confidently raised city income taxes by 0.65 percentage points shortly on the heels of a major property tax jump. In the fall, however, he lost his re-election bid to political neophyte Greg Ballard, who ran on a taxpayers first platform. Ballard won without significant backing from his own Republican party, supported only by a collection of grass roots activists, bloggers, and his own relentless door-knocking campaign.

    The divergent citizen and policy preferences of both cities continue to the present, amply illustrated by this very winter. Mayor Daley, facing a recession-induced budget gap, decided to save money by ordering that residential streets not be cleared by workers clocking overtime. Citizen unhappiness over the state of the streets during December snows led even the widely popular Daley to backtrack on this experiment, reverting to the traditional all out assault for the balance of winter.

    In Indianapolis, after 12.5 inches blanketed the city this January, crews took several days to clear its snow routes and, as per its standard operating procedure, did not plow residential streets at all. The local media carried tales of people’s laments, but ultimately the city government knows that the response to the snow will be forgotten soon after it melts. Higher tax bills, by contrast, are long remembered. In an inverse situation to Chicago, people in Indianapolis sleep at night knowing that, if services haven’t been all that great, they at least have more money in their pockets.

    While both cities have long seemed happy pursuing their respective courses, storm clouds are gathering over both strategic models of operation.

    Backing down from a high service stance in government is almost impossible. Government spending only ever seems to go one way. Faced with that logic, and the clear expectations of its citizens, Chicago in effect decided to double down. With the much celebrated resurgence of urbanism, Chicago put its chips on a soaring Loop economy driven by an emerging status as one of the top global cities, a real estate boom, and a series of tax and fee increases. It embarked on a civic transformation epitomized by community showplaces like Millennium Park, miles of top quality streetscape improvements, a new terminal at Midway Airport and the start of a multi-billion dollar O’Hare modernization, one of the nation’s best bicycling infrastructures, and perhaps most ambitiously, a bid for the 2016 Olympic Games.

    This model is increasingly showing signs of strain, however. Many taxes and fees, including the nation’s highest sales tax at 10.25%, appear to be close to maxed out. The real estate crunch hit hard at Chicago’s transfer tax revenue, another key source of city funds. This, in combination with a weak economy, has hammered the city’s budget, leaving Daley with tough, often unpopular choices to make. The CTA recently raised fares. City parking meter rates will be quadrupling under a privatization plan recently signed, hopefully plugging operating budget holes – something Daley had previously resisted. As with New York City, Chicago may be faced with the cold reality of both service cuts and tax increases.

    More importantly, as with the dot-com bubble before it, there are real questions as to whether the financial and real estate driven economy that fueled Chicago’s boom will come back in full force any time soon. In the meantime, the economy and cost of living in the city are squeezing the middle class harder by the day, and despite perhaps America’s biggest condo boom, the city’s population is slowly shrinking. All this leaves Mayor Daley, although still very popular, with perhaps the toughest leadership challenge of his tenure.

    Meanwhile Indianapolis faces problems of its own. It too has budget challenges, just as years of deferred investment are finally catching up with the city. Indianapolis has a $900 million unfunded backlog of curb and sidewalk repairs alone. It is the 13th largest municipality in America, but has the 99th largest transit system. And, more troubling, the city now finds itself outflanked by its own suburbs.

    At one time Indianapolis could comfortably decide to purchase bronze-level services while other cities paid more for gold. But now its own suburbs are offering silver, and at a lower price point in taxes than the city is selling bronze. Many of its suburbs today not only have better schools and safer streets than the central city, they feature fully professional fire departments, large park acreage, lavishly landscaped parkways exceeding city standards, and even better snow removal. In the recent storm, upscale north suburban Carmel finished plowing its cul-de-sacs before Indianapolis finished its main arteries. When people can pay less and get more just by moving to the collar counties, that’s what they do. Tens of thousands of people have left the merged central city-county in recent years. Only a large influx of the foreign born has kept Indianapolis from losing population.

    The current economy is exposing the long term structural weaknesses of both civic strategies. Chicago and Indianapolis show that both higher service and lower service models face big challenges and that neither approach represents a safe harbor in the current economic storm.

    Aaron M. Renn is an independent writer on urban affairs based in the Midwest. His writings appear at The Urbanophile.

  • Don’t Politicize the Census Bureau

    The recent decision by the Obama Administation to place the Census under the control of the White House represents a danger – not only to the integrity of the process but to the underlying assumptions that drive policy in a representative democracy. It is something that smacks of the worst anti-scientific views of the far right, or the casual political manipulation of the facts one expects in places like Russia or Iran.

    Let me be clear: I love the Bureau of the Census. I have been an avid consumer of its data since the second grade. I used to wait with anticipation for the decennial results – the 10 year population counts for states, counties and cities. Anyone who has spent any time on the Demographia websites knows the respect with which I treat Census data.

    The United States established one of the first regular censuses and it has been conducted every 10 years since 1790. The United Kingdom followed in 1801 and France in 1807, though both nations suspended their counts during World War II.

    Over the past couple of decades, the Bureau of the Census has made annual estimates widely available, so it was no longer necessary to wait for the 10 year results. This was an important step in the right direction for people interested in demographics. But, there was a more basic purpose than amusing people who make their living with numbers. As federal programs that allocate money to local jurisdictions based upon their population have become more widespread, interim annual census estimates became a necessity.

    Before the interim estimates, all sorts of “cheerleading” estimates were published, like the more than 1,000,000 population estimate I discovered for Washington, DC in the 1950s (the city never exceeded 800,000 by much). The great thing about the Bureau of the Census was that you could trust the numbers.

    Trust and accuracy were precisely what the framers had in mind when they wrote the regular decennial Census enumeration (count) into the US Constitution. The principal purpose, of course, was to apportion seats in the House of Representatives. A genuine democracy depends on ensuring all are represented equally and thus depends upon the integrity of its census.

    Recently, however, the process has become ever more politicized. The Bureau of the Census has allowed counties, cities and other local jurisdictions to challenge their annual census estimates. The incentive, of course, is that if the challenge results in a higher population estimate (and it can be expected that no jurisdiction challenges an estimate it feels is too high), more federal money is the reward.

    I became aware of the problem in watching the recently developing annual challenge ritual by the nearby city of St. Louis, which has lost more of its population than any city since the Romans sacked Carthage. No large local jurisdiction in the world, not even New Orleans, has lost as much of its population as St. Louis, which has experienced a 60 percent decline since 1950.

    So not surprisingly, the city of St. Louis has become a frequent challenger. St. Louis has successfully challenged the Bureau of the Census estimate of its population five of the seven years from 2001 to 2007 (the most recent estimate). The total of additions from census challenges adds up to 43,000 people. This is a not insubstantial 12.4 percent relative to the approximately 348,000 2000 Census count for the city.

    I began to wonder what the success rate was in census challenges. I asked the appropriate Bureau of the Census officials for a list of rejected challenges. The quick and polite response was “We do not have a list of the rejected challenges.” This seemed a strange answer, since the Bureau of the Census website lists all of the successful challenges. Moreover, my internet search for news stories about rejections of census challenge rejections yielded nothing.

    I performed an analysis of the successful challenges posted on the internet. Approximately 200 general purpose local jurisdictions have filed challenges. Nearly 40,000 have not.

    Many of the upheld challenges are in large urban cores, such as 236,000 in the city of New York and more than 100,000 in Atlanta’s core Fulton County. Among the larger jurisdictions, Fulton County added the largest to its 2000 population by challenges, at 13.5 percent.

    However, the challenges are by no means limited to urban cores. Salt Lake City suburbs West Valley City, West Jordan and Sandy challenged their counts, but not core city Salt Lake City. Nearby Provo, no urban jungle, had the largest addition to its population of any jurisdiction over 100,000 population, at 15.2 percent. The Bureau of the Census missed about 2,000 residents between Skokie and Hoffman Estates, headquarters of Sears Roebuck, but not a one in nearby Chicago, which has 25 times as many people as the two suburban jurisdictions combined.

    Overall, 47 jurisdictions with more than 100,000 population in 2000 have successfully challenged census estimates, many in more than one year. The total population addition from these challenges is 1.24 million, though there may be some duplication in city and county numbers. Overall, the census challenges have added a total of nearly 1,600,000 people, which is likely, with duplications, to exceed the population of two Congressional districts. All of the challenging jurisdictions combined had a population of less than 35 million in 2000, or less than 15 percent of the population.

    All of this raises questions. Beyond the questions about rejected challenges, if there have been any, are fundamental questions about Bureau of the Census methods. How can it be that the Census misses by so many people? Why did it presumably miss 15 percent of the population in Provo, 3 percent in New York City and 30 percent in Bazine City, Kansas, while apparently being so accurate in the remaining 85 percent of the nation that no one was missed?

    Why was the Bureau of the Census estimate so erroneous in New York, Boston and San Francisco, yet so accurate in Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Phoenix, where there were no errors?

    Then there is the more fundamental question – have there been any rejections?

    It is possible that everything is on the “up and up” with respect to the Bureau of the Census challenge program. On the other hand, there appears to be plenty of potential for mischief, as some jurisdictions have become experts at challenging and the Bureau may find rejections difficult, given the pressure that could be received from members of Congress.

    But politicization of the Census is a terrible risk. That’s why the Obama administration’s decision to move authority for the Census to the White House from the Department of Commerce is so concerning. It is hard to imagine a function of government so crucial to the genuine working of democracy becoming subject to the whims of people like White House chief of staff, Rahm Emmanuel – or down the road to a similarly partisan figure in the other party, like a Karl Rove.

    The good news is that a bill introduced by New York Democratic Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney would assure the census’s integrity. Last year, she introduced the “Restoring the Integrity of American Statistics Act of 2008,” with co-sponsors Henry Gonzales of Texas, Henry Waxman of California and William Clay of Missouri. Congresswoman Maloney’s bill would remove the Bureau of the Census from the Department of Commerce and establish it as an independent federal agency, insulated from the political process. According to the Congresswoman:

    This action will be a clear signal to Americans that the agency they depend upon for unbiased monthly economic data as well as the important decennial portrait of our nation is independent, fair, and protected from interference

    The bill has been endorsed by all seven living former directors of the Bureau of the Census, appointed by Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Clinton and both Bushes.

    This is the direction we need to go. The Administration has made much of its commitment to science and open inquiry. Preserving the sanctity of the census process would seem to confirm that commitment. In contrast, putting it under the control of White House political operatives represents a brazen act of political gamesmanship and a shameful turn in the wrong direction. It is to be hoped that the rising political firestorm and the recent withdrawal of Senator Judd Gregg from consideration for the post of Commerce Secretary might lead to a policy reversal.

    Successful Census Estimate Challenges: 2001 to 2007
    State Jurisdiction
    2000 Census Popuation
    Total Population Added in Census Challenges
    Percentage
    OVER 100,000
    NY New York City                   8,008,278                 236,120 2.9%
    TX Houston                    1,954,848                   84,364 4.3%
    NY Suffolk County                   1,419,369                   58,503 4.1%
    NY Nassau County                   1,334,544                   46,528 3.5%
    TX Dallas                    1,188,580                   25,873 2.2%
    MI Detroit                        951,270                   47,728 5.0%
    NY Westchester County                       923,459                     6,912 0.7%
    MD Montgomery County                       873,341                   10,678 1.2%
    AZ Pima County                       843,746                   29,504 3.5%
    GA Fulton County                       816,006                 109,983 13.5%
    CA San Francisco County                       776,733                   34,209 4.4%
    MD Baltimore                        651,154                   75,410 11.6%
    NJ Monmouth County                       615,301                     5,891 1.0%
    WI Milwaukee                        596,974                   29,424 4.9%
    MA Boston                        589,141                   51,540 8.7%
    DC District of Columbia                       572,059                   31,528 5.5%
    TN Davidson County                       545,524                   32,152 5.9%
    LA Orleans Parish                       484,674                   48,989 10.1%
    LA Jefferson Parish                       455,466                   16,819 3.7%
    GA Atlanta                        416,474                   12,440 3.0%
    UT Utah County                       368,536                   25,814 7.0%
    FL Miami                        362,470                   14,943 4.1%
    MO St. Louis                        348,189                   43,012 12.4%
    OH Cincinnati                        331,285                   22,582 6.8%
    OH Toledo                        313,619                   21,822 7.0%
    NY Rockland County                       286,753                     3,208 1.1%
    TX Lubbock County                       242,628                     1,678 0.7%
    VA Norfolk                        234,403                     9,720 4.1%
    VA Arlington County                       189,453                   15,634 8.3%
    NC Winston-Salem                        185,775                     8,184 4.4%
    TN Knoxville                        173,890                     4,317 2.5%
    MA Worcester                        172,648                     1,555 0.9%
    AL Huntsville                        158,216                         424 0.3%
    TN Chattanooga                        155,554                   13,103 8.4%
    MA Springfield                        152,082                     1,404 0.9%
    VA Alexandria                        128,283                   11,687 9.1%
    SD Sioux Falls                        123,975                     5,848 4.7%
    NY Jefferson County                       111,738                   11,631 10.4%
    IL Springfield                        111,454                     1,020 0.9%
    WA Bellevue                        109,569                     4,442 4.1%
    UT West Valley                        108,896                     6,011 5.5%
    UT Provo                        105,166                   16,003 15.2%
    PA Erie                        103,717                     2,608 2.5%
    Subtotal                 28,595,240             1,241,245 4.3%
    Smaller Jurisdictions                 345,025
    All Jurisdictions             1,586,270

    Wendell Cox is a Visiting Professor, Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers, Paris. He was born in Los Angeles and was appointed to three terms on the Los Angeles County Transportation Commission by Mayor Tom Bradley. He is the author of “War on the Dream: How Anti-Sprawl Policy Threatens the Quality of Life.

  • Fool Me Once, Geithner, Shame on You, Fool Me Twice…

    Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner revealed the new “Financial Stability Plan” on February 10, 2009. It’s thick with “why we need it” and thin on “exactly what it is.” He told Congress that he would open a website to disclose where all the bailout money was going. When asked if he would reveal where the first $350 billion went, he was a little vague on the details.

    Senator Grassley (R-IA) asked him at the confirmation hearings about the Maiden Lane LLCs and the money he passed out to private, non-regulated companies. His written response then was “Confidentiality around the specific characteristics and performance of individual loans in the portfolio is maintained in order to allow the asset manager the flexibility to manage the assets in a way that maximizes the value of portfolio and mitigates risk of loss to the taxpayer.” In other words, he wouldn’t say. When asked “What specific additional disclosure would you support?” Tim’s response was “If confirmed, I look forward to working with you and with Chairman Bernanke on ways to respond to your suggestions and concerns.” Variations on the “If confirmed, I look forward to working on it” answer was cut and pasted into his 102 page written responses 104 times, or more than once per page.

    Back in 2008 when the big bailout bucks were being passed around, we (and Congress) were led to believe that this was all being done to fix problems in housing and mortgage markets. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said this in her speech on the floor before the vote: “We’re putting up $700 billion; we want the American people to get some of the upside. …[we] insisted that we would have forbearance on foreclosure. If we’re now going to own that [mortgage-backed securities] paper, that we would then have forbearance to help responsible homeowners stay in their home.” Three million homes went into foreclosure last year.

    Speaker Pelosi went on to tell us that the bill would include “an end to the golden parachutes and a review and reform of the compensation for CEOs.” Excuse my cynicism but Tim Geithner took a $500,000 walk-away bonus when he left the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the maximum earnings allowed under President Obama’s suggested compensation cap; but that was on top of his $400,000 salary which would put him over the limit. Obama appointee Deputy Secretary of State Jacob Lew took home just under $1.1 million last year as a managing director at Citi Alternative Investments, a unit of Citigroup, which so far took $45 billion in bailout money.

    So, let’s add this up. Tim hides $330 billion from us while he’s at the Fed, refuses to tell Congress who it went to, refuses to tell Congress who Paulson gave the money to, and takes more than his share of compensation.

    Now he wants us to believe that Treasury can “require all Financial Stability Plan recipients to participate in foreclosure mitigation plans.” Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. I, personally, don’t believe a word of it. And neither should you. It’s all baloney, bogus, phantom. They are paying lip service to the American taxpayers so you won’t send those faxes to Congress or throw shoes at the new President. They are passing the money to the same Democratic big wigs that paid for their election campaigns – just as they did in the past to the Republicans. Tim is shoveling more money to the same private companies that he previously sent freshly-printed Federal Reserve notes. Now he can also pass out Congressionally-approved money. While Congress struggled with spending $800 billion to directly stimulate economic activity in the US, Tim thumbed his nose at them by presenting a plan to spread around more than $2.5 trillion that won’t require their approval. That’s the way it is and I think it would be a very bad idea to stop him.

    Yes, you read that right. I said it would be a bad idea to stop. I’m a fan of NASCAR racing. When a driver begins to lose control of the car and is sailing head first into a concrete wall at 190 miles per hour there is only one way to save it – stand on the gas. Your every instinct is to hit the brakes, to stop the car before you slam into the wall. But if you hit the brakes you’ll lose traction and control. By pressing down on the gas, you put power to the wheels which (hopefully) are still in contact with the track – with traction comes control and you can steer away from the wall. Oh, but it isn’t easy! Every cell in your monkey-cousin brain will scream: “Slam on the brakes!”

    So, it’s like the economy is heading for the wall. And Tim has decided to hit the gas – another $100 billion for the banks, $1 trillion for private capital to put in junk bonds, $1 trillion for private investors to spend on junk loans, $600 billion for Fannie and Freddie’s debt – yet only $50 billion to reduce mortgage payments for “middle class homes” in foreclosure.

    But even if we avoid hitting the wall, that doesn’t mean we don’t need to change the course. For years I have argued we need to fix the race track and improve the aerodynamics of the cars so they won’t head into the wall in the first place. I would insist that broker dealers have to deliver what they sell. I would prohibit the sale of derivatives in excess of the underlying assets. But that’s technical stuff, like requiring roof flaps in NASCAR (little flaps that come up when the car spins backwards to keep it from going airborne). It would prevent the really bad wrecks, but then no one would tune in on Sunday if there weren’t any wrecks, right?

    Enjoy the show as Tim tries to keep from crashing into the wall. But don’t be fooled that he is fixing anything. Even if he pulls the economy out this time, the track is still broken and the cars are still not aerodynamically sound. They’ll wreck it again – as they did in 1981 (inflation so high that Treasury bonds paid 19%), in 1987 (October stock market crash of 23% was worst of all time), in 1991 (junk bond collapse and credit crunch) and in 2000 (the dot.com bust).

    This will keep happening until we take the time to understand the real causes and put in real solutions. The solution is not now and has never been to throw money at it. This is the “junkie cousin” approach that Amy Poehler (Saturday Night Live) compared to the Original Bailout package: “It’s like you lend $100 to your junkie cousin to pay his rent. And when you run into him at the racetrack next week, you lend him another $50.”

    At what point do you “get it” that your cousin is gambling away the money you lent him for the rent, that this is not really helping your cousin to kick junk? The solution is not throwing money around but accounting for all the money already out there (including the stocks, bonds and derivatives). It’s not more regulation, it’s enforcing rules that are already on the books. Real solutions take real work. I’m not hopeful that the US government and markets are willing to do the work. So, I’ll make sure I’m wearing a helmet with my seat-belt buckled for the next crash, say just around 2017.

    Susanne Trimbath, Ph.D. is CEO and Chief Economist of STP Advisory Services. Her training in finance and economics began with editing briefing documents for the Economic Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. She worked in operations at depository trust and clearing corporations in San Francisco and New York, including Depository Trust Company, a subsidiary of DTCC; formerly, she was a Senior Research Economist studying capital markets at the Milken Institute. Her PhD in economics is from New York University. In addition to teaching economics and finance at New York University and University of Southern California (Marshall School of Business), Trimbath is co-author of Beyond Junk Bonds: Expanding High Yield Markets.

  • The Pleasure of Their Company

    Executives from banks including Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, and Bank of America (who bought Merrill Lynch) have been called to Capitol Hill to explain what they did with their shares of the $750 billion bailout. (You can watch it live or read transcripts here.)

    Here’s a good question to put to those executives: how much did you spend on whores?

    According to a story by 20/20 aired on ABC on February 6, 2009, Wall Street executives and bankers used company credit cards to pay for prostitutes. When the head of the prostitution ring was arrested, her list of clients included bank executives who used company credit cards and disguised the charges as “computer consulting, construction expenses” and “roof repair on a warehouse”.

    This raises their behavior to the level of a felony: committing fraud to hide a crime. Soliciting prostitutes is still a crime – even if it is rarely enforced. Disguising whoring as a tax-deductible business expense certainly qualifies as fraud. Making it even worse, if the ABC story is true, several of the bankers paid for their pleasure with our money. Included in the roster are:

    • an investment banker at Goldman Sachs who spent $27,000
    • an investment banker at JP Morgan Securities who spent $41,600
    • a managing director from Merrill Lynch

    Anyone who has spent time on Wall Street, as I did during the 1980s and 1990s, knows that paying prostitutes as entertainment goes on all the time. They fool themselves into thinking that they deserve it, or that everyone does it so it must be ok, or that no one is getting hurt.

    Yet this is a pattern that goes well beyond buying women. I taught business ethics at New York University and the Stern School of Business for many years; ethics and economics is one of the field specializations in my Ph.D. Many people who paid for prostitutes with what amounts to the public’s money already rationalized other unethical decisions, like, for example, misleading a client on a stock because it will inflate your bonus. Or giving a AAA rating to a mortgage-backed security that looks dodgy but will earn a big fee.

    So, if you have already taken the plunge in other areas, when you have a choice to spend $41,000 of the company’s money on a prostitute, you don’t consider the ethics. You already have made that decision before; you may have done it a thousand times before.

    This is the kind of lapse that allows someone like John Thain to spend $1 million to redecorate his office while taking public funds. Or for a supposed public icon like Robert Rubin to defend his role in the Citicorp destruction by saying he could have made even more money working somewhere else.

    And believe or not, it’s still going on. Another bailout baby, J.P. Morgan Chase is still completing a renovation of its New York headquarters at a reported cost of $250 million. They started their project in June 2007. Citigroup started their renovation of the executive offices in New York in September 2008, just as Congress was approving the first bailout package.

    The good news is not everyone gives into the temptation. I know guys who walked away; guys who refused to take part in it even when their Wall Street boss offered to pass along the prostitute who was giving everyone in the office oral sex that afternoon. These guys wanted to wake up the next morning and look into their daughter’s eyes without remorse. Guys who decided to create a business environment in which they would want those daughters to live and work.

    These are the guys who would take responsibility for their misjudgments in business and say no to a bonus in a year when their clients have been devastated. Sadly, many of those guys left Wall Street a long time ago. They probably are not the guys who are lined up for bailout money. This is not the kind of problem you stick around to fight to change. The problem with winning a gutter fight is that you are still in the gutter. Sometimes it’s better to just walk away.

    According to the Associated Press, nine out of ten senior executives still at the banks that took federal bailout money were there to play a role in creating the crisis. Far too few have been thrown out for incompetence. So far none has been thrown in prison for fraud or theft. Most probably will take their nice vacations, count their sick days accumulated, and keep that vital company credit card for entertaining. This is not the case, of course, for the 100,000 bank employees who lost their jobs between 2006 and 2008.

    As the newest shareholders in these banks, the US taxpayers should have some say in all this. Shareholders should be able to oust the Board and the executives who led their firms, and the country, into this morass. We have bailed these miscreants out but without taking any control. So we end up paying for the pleasure of their company while they go out and use our money to pay for someone else’s. On Wall Street, or here in Omaha, that’s called getting screwed.

    Susanne Trimbath, Ph.D. is CEO and Chief Economist of STP Advisory Services. Her training in finance and economics began with editing briefing documents for the Economic Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. She worked in operations at depository trust and clearing corporations in San Francisco and New York, including Depository Trust Company, a subsidiary of DTCC; formerly, she was a Senior Research Economist studying capital markets at the Milken Institute. Her PhD in economics is from New York University. In addition to teaching economics and finance at New York University and University of Southern California (Marshall School of Business), Trimbath is co-author of Beyond Junk Bonds: Expanding High Yield Markets.

  • Stimulus Plan Caters to the Privileged Public Sector

    Call it the Paulson Principle, Part Deux.

    Under the now thankfully-departed Treasury secretary, we got the first bailout for the undeserving – essentially, members of his own Wall Street class.

    Now comes the Democratic codicil to the P. Principle. It’s a massive bailout and expansion of the public-sector workforce as well as quasi-government workers in fields like health and education. Not so well-rewarded – except for expanded unemployment benefits – will be those suffering the brunt of the downturn, such as construction and manufacturing workers, whose unemployment is now heading north of 10%.

    Indeed, a close look at the current stimulus plan shows that as little as 5% of the money is going toward making the country more productive in the longer run – toward such things as new roads, bridges, improved rail and significant new electrical generation. These are things, like the New Deal’s many construction projects, that could provide a needed boost to our sagging national morale.

    Instead, we are focusing once again on those who have been getting the best deal for doing the least. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports state and local government workers get paid 33% more than their private sector counterparts. If you add in the pensions and other benefits, the difference is over 40%. In New York alone, public-sector wages and benefits since 2000 have grown twice as fast as those of the average private-sector worker.

    Egregious stories of overpaid public workers are legion. In suburban Chicago, for example, some school administrators are making over $400,000 with benefits and incentives. Recent reports out of Boston suggest hundreds of firefighters and police officers make well in excess of $100,000 a year. And of course, there are the California prison guards who can make upwards of $300,000 a year with overtime.

    Of course, most public sector employees are not so lucky. But, for the most part, these workers enjoy protections, like health care for life, that most others could only dream about. Many also have pensions that allow them to retire in their 50s, while some of us will be hod-carrying well into our 70s.

    This all means that the potential price tag for swelling the public workforce could ultimately run into the trillions, a number Washington and Wall Street now use the way we used to talk about billions. At very least, we should be asking new public workers, or those whose jobs are being bailed out by the stimulus package, to make the kind of sacrifices demanded, say, of those working at General Motors. We could, for example, make them wait ’til age 60 or even 65 to retire.

    To no one’s surprise, much of this favoritism has to do with party politics. The basic truth is that auto and other industrial workers, like those in construction, have become somewhat expendable in the eyes of some Democrats – in part because they do not always follow the party line. In contrast, public-employee unions are the politically correct rock upon which much of the party now rests.

    This oversized influence is relatively recent. Yet as private-sector unions have waned, those in the public sector have waxed. They have been able to extort enormous benefits out of City Halls, counties, states and, of course, Congress.

    In the process, they have become – like the Wall Street financiers before them – a kind of privileged class. In the case of some Chicago garbage men, they often don’t work anything near 40 hours a week but are paid as if they did. Others engage in elaborate schemes to take advantage of injuries, real or imagined. Who would have thought that punching tickets for the Long Island Rail Road would be so hazardous that many retired employees use these “injuries” to collect disability money – in order to play golf or take another job?

    This can all get very expensive, especially given the poor immediate prospects that the stock market can finance these additional pensions. Some day the millennial generation should initiate a class action suit for placing this unconscionable burden on them.

    Right now, though, there’s little reason to expect President Obama and the majority Democrats will change direction. The public sector unions are often among the largest contributors to Democratic campaigns. They have also cultivated strong ties with the Washington media – some of whom, like The Washington Post’s Harold Meyerson, have argued over the years that these public workers are increasingly synonymous with the future middle class.

    There’s certain logic to this. Insulated from global competition, public employees have the ability to ratchet up their demands almost without serious limit. After all, even the most radical Republicans are not proposing to have the postal system transferred to Vietnam. We certainly don’t want to outsource our police services to China or Russia.

    So what’s not to like? Well, nothing – if the Roman Empire or China’s Qing Dynasty is your idea of a historical role model. Those regimes epitomize what happens when most of a nation’s wealth goes to support an ever-expanding bureaucracy and associated private-sector rent-seekers at the expense of both private commerce and public infrastructure. Look in the dictionary under the word decline.

    We can already see its early signs. Across the country, cities are being forced to choose between maintaining their basic infrastructure and honoring the medical, retirement and other pension obligations owed to retired public workers. The head of the Atlanta Fire Fighters’ Pension fund described groups like his as “the 800-pound gorilla in the room.” This primate has the power to stomp on the ability of states, cities and counties to put money into improving much of anything or even considering lowering taxes.

    Over time, though, one can hope President Obama will adjust his course. At some point, the middle- and working-class stiffs in the private sector – unionized or not – will question a stimulus that neglects their aspirations at the expense of protecting the imagined rights of yet another privileged class. Individually, public employees may not be as noxious as John Thain, but there are more of them. And over time, they could cost us even more.

    As a charismatic leader with strong union support, Obama could try to pull a “Nixon in China” and insist on reforming the benefits enjoyed by public workers as a condition of federal help. He wouldn’t be the only leader attempting a return to sanity. The idea of challenging public sector privilege has gained some currency in Ireland and France, as well as among the Liberal Democrats in the U.K.

    Such a bold initiative would earn President Obama not only gratitude from private sector workers but also posterity. But it would take courage, too; the mere suggestion of reform could result in a rash of strikes (as in Greece) and ceaseless yammering from union lobbyists and their allies on Capitol Hill.

    Of course, public-sector unions and their supporters will argue that they constitute an important part of the nation’s middle class and that their benefits are therefore sacrosanct. Yet it’s increasingly evident that this strata of middle-class workers live in a different reality than typical private sector shmoes. As George Orwell suggested in Animal Farm, it seems some animals are more equal than others.

    This article originally appeared at Forbes.

    Joel Kotkin is executive editor of NewGeography.com and is a presidential fellow in urban futures at Chapman University. He is author of The City: A Global History and is finishing a book on the American future.

  • This Perp Walk Needs Handcuffs

    Do many of us truly understand the scale of one trillion dollars? The following executives have been called to Capitol Hill to explain what they did with their shares of the $750 billion bailout:

    – Mr. Lloyd C. Blankfein, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Goldman Sachs & Co.
    – Mr. James Dimon, Chief Executive Officer, JPMorgan Chase & Co.
    – Mr. Robert P. Kelly, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Bank of New York Mellon
    – Mr. Ken Lewis, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Bank of America
    – Mr. Ronald E. Logue, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, State Street Corporation
    – Mr. John J. Mack, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Morgan Stanley
    – Mr. Vikram Pandit, Chief Executive Officer, Citigroup
    – Mr. John Stumpf, President and Chief Executive Officer, Wells Fargo & Co.

    The panel was called in by the house Committee on Finance. (You can watch it live at house.gov on February 11, 2009, 10:00 a.m. Eastern.) The House events are more exciting than the Senate, whose members take decorum too seriously to ask direct questions and raise their voices when they don’t get answers.

    These guys (no women) are being called in to answer questions about what they did with the $750 billion bailout. Most people don’t really understand what a billion dollars is, let alone a number of billions that equals three-quarters of a trillion dollars. Let me try to bring it home.

    Most people know what a million dollars is – it’s been popularized in TV programs like “Who Wants to be a Millionaire?” and “Joe Millionaire”. Most state lotteries have minimum prizes of a few million dollars. Angelina Jolie and other very popular actors reportedly receive $20 million for making one movie. Blockbuster movies can have more than $100 million in ticket sales on a good opening weekend. There are about 130 million housing units (homes, condos, trailers, etc.) in the U.S. The population of the US is a little over 300 million. We’re working our way up to $1 billion if we think of $3 or $4 per person. $1 billion is about equal to the annual income of 16,555 Americans. The entire population of Nebraska earns about $120 billion in a year. The population of California would earn about $150 billion in a month.

    The U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve paid $150 billion for an 80-percent stake in American International Group (AIG) in a bailout announced on September 16, 2008. On September 22, just days after receiving this bailout, AIG spent $443,000 on a spa outing at the luxurious St. Regis Resort in Monarch Beach, California, including $23,000 in spa treatments. AIG visited the Hill on October 7, 2008 where its CEO defended the spending as “necessary to maintain business.”

    When they left the Hill, they threw a second party for themselves at another luxury hotel, this time $86,000 at a New England hunting retreat. They canceled 160 events after Congress and the press complained, but they still went on to spend $343,000 on a three-day event at Arizona’s Pointe Hilton Squaw Peak Resort in November. This time they made sure there were no AIG signs on the premises – three months later I still can’t figure out why no one is in jail for fraud.

    Treasury, so far, has refused to tell us where much of the money went, beyond paying for pricey canapés and comfy beds. Not surprisingly, Fox Business Network ran a half-page ad in USA Today on February 3 to announce that they “sued the Treasury and the Federal Reserve” to find out where the TARP and FRB-NY money went. The Senate is considering subpoenas to get Treasury to tell them where it all went. Talk about imperial government!

    Let’s keep going, because the numbers get bigger. The Treasury passed out $750 billion in their bailout. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Fed Chief Ben Bernanke said that “The initiative is aimed at removing the devalued mortgage-linked assets at the root of the worst credit crisis since the Great Depression.” (Bloomberg, September 19, 2008.) There were about 3,000,000 homes in foreclosure at the end of 2008.

    But who was really being bailed out? For $750 billion you could buy all of them outright and still have more than $100 billion left over to make car loans, student loans, small business loans – or pay bonuses to all the Wall Street and Bank executives in 2008. California had the most foreclosure of any state in 2008 – 523,624. $750 billion would have saved all of them – three times over.

    For $750 billion you could buy 3,507,951 single-family homes in the US. That’s equivalent to every home built in the US in 2006 and 2007. You could buy about 3% of all the homes standing today in the US.

    $750 billion would buy you 1,524,390 single-family homes in LA County, or 83% of the total. With $750 billion you could buy all the land in private hands in Los Angeles County (but not the buildings on it) and still have enough left over ($185 billion) to buy all the buildings and structures in Los Angeles city.

    Now, Congress is working on a stimulus package that is approaching $1 trillion. Not to rush you through the math, but if you got this far, then you are already three-quarters of the way there. Apparently, Los Angeles is $1 trillion: That’s about the value of all the residential, commercial and industrial property in LA County. (Actually, $1.109 trillion, but what’s a hundred billion among friends?)

    A stimulus package of $819 billion should give $6,306 to every household. It won’t, of course. But it should.

    So what’s my conclusion? This bailout plan has little to do with addressing the root problems of the housing crisis, or helping hard-pressed Americans. It’s about bailing out the big banks and financial institutions from the consequences of their own miscalculations.

    NOTE: calculations use median home prices and median incomes. Unless specified as “single-family homes” the housing numbers refer to all units which include condominiums, manufactured housing, apartments, etc.

    Susanne Trimbath, Ph.D. is CEO and Chief Economist of STP Advisory Services. Her training in finance and economics began with editing briefing documents for the Economic Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. She worked in operations at depository trust and clearing corporations in San Francisco and New York, including Depository Trust Company, a subsidiary of DTCC; formerly, she was a Senior Research Economist studying capital markets at the Milken Institute. Her PhD in economics is from New York University. In addition to teaching economics and finance at New York University and University of Southern California (Marshall School of Business), Trimbath is co-author of Beyond Junk Bonds: Expanding High Yield Markets.

  • Public Pension Troubles Loom for State and Local Governments

    We have watched with trepidation as the stock market declines and along with it the value of our retirement accounts. Yet with our personal accounts, it’s our own problem. When it comes to public pensions, it’s the taxpayer’s problem. Underfunded pensions could cut two ways, leading to much higher taxes and/or cuts in government spending.

    This is a particularly big issue here in my home state of Illinois. The Chicago Sun-Times just reported the Land of Obama has earned the dubious honor of having the most underfunded public pension plan in America.

    According to Professor Jeremy Siegel, the above-average returns of the stock market in the recent past have attracted the attention of public pension fund managers.

    The prospect of bigger returns has led managers to pour billions in public pensions into stock. Finance Professors Deborah Lucas and Stephen Zeldes report that the share of state and local (S&L) plan assets held in equities has greatly increased over time from an average of about 40 percent in the late 1980s to about 70 percent in 2007.

    In the current market environment, this exposure led to a loss of an estimated $1 trillion dollars over the past year. Are stocks likely to average annual returns of 10% for the next 20 years? Not likely, and that’s a big problem for both public pension funds, and for the poor taxpayer.

    Equity investing will see many challenges in the coming years. Here are some issues to consider. The reaction to Enron’s bankruptcy was much tighter regulation on corporate accounting. This led to the infamous Sarbanes-Oxley law which has made it far less desirable to run public investment funds and slowed the development of new IPOs. The result, as Joe Weisenthal reported in February of 2007, was a spectacular rise in private equity funds, such as the infamous hedge funds, which contributed mightily to the recent financial meltdown.

    Successful IPOs eventually join the major indexes which help the long run drive equity returns. Fewer IPOs mean less opportunity for investing in listed equities. This will make it harder for pension funds to enjoy higher returns.

    And then there are some demographic concerns. In 2008 the first cohort of baby boomers retired. Many more will follow. This will put increasing strains on all equity investors. Eventually, pension fund managers will have to be net sellers of equities to raise cash for the retiring boomers. No one can say with certitude when this trend will hit critical mass, but when pension funds become net sellers stocks are almost certain to go down.

    The giant bull market of 1982-2000 was driven not only by favorable demographics but also lower marginal income tax rates, cuts in capital gains taxes, and lower inflation. All three conditions could very likely be much higher in the next 20 years. President Obama has openly talked about higher capital gains taxes and the rich being obligated to fund expanded government programs. Recent increases in the money supply by the Federal Reserve Board point to potentially much higher rates of inflation and interest rates. Equities will perform poorly in such an environment.

    American equity investors are in a new era with the federal government making direct investments in private companies. What are the likely results of the federal government controlling an industry? Not good. The TARP program quickly expanded to taxpayers funding car companies that under normal market conditions would have been forced into bankruptcy. What other industries does the federal government have in mind for taking over? Is the medical industry next? Drug companies? Until recently these scenarios were unimaginable.

    All this uncertainty, at very least, is quite bad for equity investing.

    The TARP program is likely to have profound long-term affects on capital markets. With the government having a big stake in major banks, future business loans could potentially be influenced by politicians who regulate the banks. This will lead to a massive misallocation of resources. Will the federal government encourage more homeownership when the housing market has a huge supply? Only time will tell. Will a bank branch be allowed to close in a powerful Congressman’s district?

    As equities lose their attractiveness, public pensions may have to look to corporate bonds and real estate to get investment returns. Are these investments likely to produce historical rates of return that equities have? It’s very unlikely. Governments may be forced to conduct fire sales of their properties just to raise cash to meet their pension obligations.

    Something will have to change. Without a restored boom in stock prices, public pension funds will have a very hard time meeting their obligations. Either governments will have to increase taxes – perhaps dramatically – or force public employees to endure the same risks and potentially anemic returns the rest of us may be up against. Given the size of these funds, and the enormous political power of government workers, this may create one of the major political conflicts of the coming decade.

    Steve Bartin is a resident of Cook County and native who blogs regularly about urban affairs at http://nalert.blogspot.com. He works in Internet sales.

  • Reviving the City of Aspiration: A Study of the Challenges Facing New York City’s Middle Class

    For much of its history, New York City has thrived as a place that both sustained a large middle class and elevated countless people from poorer backgrounds into the ranks of the middle class. The city was never cheap and parts of Manhattan always remained out of reach, but working people of modest means—from forklift operators and bus drivers to paralegals and museum guides—could enjoy realistic hopes of home ownership and a measure of economic security as they raised their families across the other four boroughs. At the same time, New York long has been the city for strivers—not just the kind associated with the highest echelons of Wall Street, but new immigrants, individuals with little education but big dreams, and aspiring professionals in fields from journalism and law to art and advertising.

    In recent years, however, major changes have greatly diminished the city’s ability to both retain and create a sizable middle class. Even as the inflow of new arrivals to New York has surged to levels not seen since the 1920s, the cost of living has spiraled beyond the reach of many middle class individuals and, particularly, families. Increasingly, only those at the upper end of the middle class, who are affluent enough to afford not only the sharply higher housing prices in every corner of the city but also the steep costs of child care and private schools, can afford to stay—and even among this group, many feel stretched to the limits of their resources. Equally disturbing, even in good times, the city’s economy seems less and less capable of producing jobs that pay enough to support a middle class lifestyle in New York’s high-cost environment.

    The current economic crisis, which has arrested and even somewhat reversed the skyrocketing price of housing, might offer short-term opportunities to some in the market for homes. But the mortgage meltdown and its aftermath will not change the underlying dynamic: over the past three decades, a wide gap has opened between the means of most New Yorkers and the costs of living in the city. We have seen this dynamic play out even during the last 15 years, as the local economy thrived and crime rates plummeted. Despite these advances, large numbers of middle class New Yorkers have been leaving the city for other locales, while many more of those who have stayed seem permanently stuck among the ranks of the working poor, with little apparent hope of upward mobility. This is a serious challenge for New York in both good times and bad. A recent survey found the city to be the worst urban area in the nation for the average citizen to build wealth. For the first time in its storied history, the Big Apple is in jeopardy of permanently losing its status as the great American city of aspiration.

    This report takes an in-depth look at the challenges facing New York City’s middle class. More than a year in the works, the report draws upon an extensive economic and demographic analysis, a historical review, focus groups conducted in every borough and over 100 individual interviews with academics, economists and a wide range of individuals on the ground in the five boroughs. These include homeowners, labor leaders, small business owners, real estate brokers, housing developers, immigrant advocates, and officials from nearly two dozen community boards.

    Throughout the course of our research, the vast majority of New Yorkers—for the most part fierce defenders of the city—were alarmingly pessimistic about the current and future prospects of the local middle class. “What middle class?” was the quip we heard repeatedly after telling people about our study.

    But for all the valid concerns of those we spoke with, our conclusion is that a strong middle class remains in New York, and that there are considerable grounds for optimism about its future. In 2007, the city recorded the second highest total of building permits issued since it started keeping track in 1965, with Brooklyn and Queens hitting records—a clear sign that large numbers of people want to live in these long-time middle class havens. Home ownership rates in the city reached their highest levels ever in 2007, another testament to the city’s desirability—even if a not insignificant share of the recent housing purchases were driven by unfair and deceptive predatory lending practices. And in many communities, there have been long waiting lists for day care centers and private schools. While the economic crisis is already leading to sharp spikes in foreclosures, a precipitous decline in housing sales and, most troubling, a massive number of layoffs, it should not reverse the sense of many middle class families that New York now offers a safe environment to raise their kids—a key factor in the decision to stay in the city rather than decamp for the suburbs.

    “The perception of New York among young people is so phenomenal,” says Alan Bell, a partner with the Hudson Companies, a real estate development company that has built housing from the East Village to the Rockaways. “It used to be that automatically you’d get married and had kids and you were out to Montclair, New Jersey or Westchester. Now they want to stay. The question is how they stay since it’s so expensive.”

    Set against this picture of progress, however, are some alarming trends. Most of the people interviewed for this report told us of middle class friends, relatives or colleagues who had recently given up on the city. “I work with a lot of people who moved to Philadelphia and commute each day,” says Chris Daly, a media director at Macy’s who now lives with his wife and three kids in Tottenville, Staten Island but plans to move to New Jersey. “It’s the cost of living. You’re going to see more people moving to Philadelphia, the Poconos and commuting.”

    Unless we find ways to reverse some of the trends detailed in this report, the New York of the 21st century will continue to develop into a city that is made up increasingly of the rich, the poor, immigrant newcomers and a largely nomadic population of younger people who exit once they enter their 30s and begin establishing families. Although such a population might sustain the current “luxury city”—as Mayor Michael Bloomberg famously described New York—it betrays the city’s aspirational heritage. Further, a New York largely denuded of its middle class will find it nearly impossible to sustain a diversified economy, the importance of which is clearer than ever in light of the current finance-led recession.

    As a final consideration, a large and thriving middle class has always provided the ballast that a great city requires. Throughout modern history, such cities at their height—for example, Venice in the 15th century and Amsterdam in the 17th—have nurtured a large and growing middle class. But no city has had a greater history as a middle class incubator than New York. As the legendary urbanist and long time New York resident Jane Jacobs once noted: “A metropolitan economy, if working well, is constantly transforming many poor people into middle class people, many illiterates into skilled people, many greenhorns into competent citizens… Cities don’t lure the middle class. They create it.”

    Although some may suggest that this is a role New York can no longer play, we believe it is one that the city needs to address if it is to remain a truly great city.

    Released by Center for an Urban Future, this report was written by Jonathan Bowles, Joel Kotkin and David Giles. It was edited by David Jason Fischer and Tara Colton, and designed by Damian Voerg. Mark Schill, an associate with Praxis Strategy Group, provided demographic and economic data analysis for this project. Additional research by Zina Klapper of www.newgeography.com as well as Roy Abir, Ben Blackwood, Nancy Campbell, Pam Corbett, Anne Gleason, Katherine Hand, Kyle Hatzes, May Hui, Farah Rahaman, Qianqi Shen, Linda Torricelli and Miguel Yanez-Barnuevo.