Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Depression.org ... by gimleteye

If you want to know why the stock market is plunging, it is because the world is caught between President Obama's assurance that the trillion dollar stimulus-- the first of several initatives-- is the beginning of the end of our economic troubles and the worry, expressed by numerous observers, that it could also be the beginning of the unravelling of the world economy: a Depression.

This is not a matter interpreting whether the stimulus glass is half-empty, or, half-full.

To give the public confidence that we are not pouring money down that black hole (and to help buoy stock markets around the world), the list of stimulus targets must be strongly balanced to reflect that public money will be spent to fundamentally rework our economy to make products that people need, recreating long-term and sustainable jobs based on a new energy model. If it is all repaving and road and bridge contracts, we are headed to a Depression. (hit read more.)

I am not reassured by the project list assembled from the US Conference of Mayors Report (whose chair is Miami Mayor Manny Diaz). For Miami-Dade, the list totals $7 billion: the number I've used to summarize the infrastructure "deficit" that has been held closely guarded as a state secret by the county manager for years.

There is a new website called stimuluswatch.org that appears to be an honest effort by independent researchers to inform the public: this is the list of "shovel ready" projects that could be funded through the stimulus bill just signed into law by President Obama. I've taken a quick look. It's a bonanza windfall for cement manufacturers and road pavers, as I suspected it would be and cautioned against. It is for workers with shovels and heavy construction equipment.

Take a look for yourselves.

Let me put this as succinctly as possible: these projects, nearly all of them with the exception of the water treatment facilities, may be "shovel-ready" but they really represent icing on a cake that doesn't exist. The "cake" itself is where the stimulus money should be directed: build new jobs and economic drivers. What the list reflects is the absence of both imagination and a sense of urgency tied to the current reality: we are on the cusp of a Depression.

Carl Hiassen put it simply, in The Miami Herald: "Developers have controlled state and county governments for so long that no Plan B exists." Hiassen is right. If you look closely at the list, it clearly shows there is no Plan B.

"Lost and clueless, lawmakers desperately hack away at public budgets while clinging to the hope that boom times will return."

The list of projects on Stimuluswatch.org basically lay out the red carpet for the return of the boom times, without adding a single cent or inkling where the boom times will come from.

Repaving roads and bridges and so forth may be a quick stimulus to improve infrastructure, but these economic activities do not get at making things that people need. These products most certainly will not come from thin air, or, from the inflation of developers' expectation that a new market for suburbs or platted subdivisions in farmland will suddenly materialize. It ain't gonna happen.

It's over. Throwing money at road paving contracts is maybe what you do after a Depression and you have to thin the soup and bread kitchen lines. We're not there yet, but if the list from Miami-Dade is any indication and if this is where the stimulus money goes: we are headed in that direction.

6 comments:

Geniusofdespair said...

Great post...I am very unhappy with the choice of projects. We need to retool not retread.

Anonymous said...

"Of the developers, by the developers, for the developers"

Taking the words of visionary Paul Novack of Surfside?

To see the future harm, to protect a community, to sound the alarm ... that was foresight.

So sorely lacking so often but there it was.

Anonymous said...

I agree- Obama still gets caught up in this 'road and bridge' rhetoric, and funding in the bill reflects that. Roads and bridges will get $30 billion, but rail, and mass transit get around $17 Billion. This is a drop in the bucket compared to what we need to break our dependence on the car. Check out Miami Dade's latest infrastructure list which includes funding for all three phases of the Orange Line, as well as for repairs and upgrades - these are worthy projects and go toward creating green jobs.
If you want to read a really depressing list of projects go to the Florida DOT for $7Billion worth of shovel ready highway projects to nowhere - these are the projects we should be scared of because they benefit the same sprawl developers who helped get us into this mess!

P.S. www.recover.gov is the official website setup to monitor the distribution of the funds.

Anonymous said...

OK, you dig a ditch over there. That's one job. OK, you fill the ditch in. That's two jobs. Those two guys can now go home and buy food to feed their kids and then they will go to Walmart and buy some school supplies that were made in China (that's a whole bunch more). In the end, what wealth have we created?

Anonymous said...

Thanks Anonymous, Obama's plan is filled with MAKE WORK jobs and just plain waste all that money is or will be sucked out of the private side of the economic equation which is the true economic engine. Private companies both large and small DO a much better job getting people what they neeed and want than government ever has. Get a clue Gimleteye stop reading Marx and Keynes there the ones that got us here in the first place.

Anonymous said...

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