Monday, December 28, 2009

Memo to Democrats: use financial levers and taxation to stop suburban sprawl ... by gimleteye

Over the holiday I met a young analyst who works at one of the top bond rating agencies, analyzing collateralized mortgage debt. These derivatives, in many different forms, were weapons of mass financial destruction that detonated the economy. The cozy relationship between originators, like Goldman Sachs and other investment banks, accountants and ratings agencies are components of fraudulent wealth creation that blinded government, the media and the public. Trillions of taxpayer obligations have been created to paper over the banking and financial crisis that still threatens a second Great Depression.

Today, the issue of job creation dominates every area of economic policy. But "jobs, jobs, jobs" is just whistling by the graveyard containing the remnants of so much economic carnage. Most decision makers are waiting for the miracle to come; that an economy based on construction and development will rise Phoenix-like from the ashes of the housing crash and excess of commercial real estate. There is very little critical thinking applied to what kinds of growth might be sustainable, as opposed to the addictions of the mortgage pools where everything and anything that fogs the cash flow mirror is suitable to be collateralized.

My analyst friend confirmed what we know to be true about the production housing markets for instance: that there is only a tiny fraction of bond business going through the Wall Street mills today. I had a specific and different question: how would he, if he had the chance, impose financial costs to prevent the proliferation of suburban sprawl that has lead to both so much crappy, fetid overdevelopment in the fast growing regions of the nation, like Florida, and destruction of quality of life and the environment, too.

By the time that bond rating agencies in downtown Manhattan set ratings for a mortgage pool, there is nothing vaguely resembling scrutiny of underlying environmental value. The pressure to rate mortgage pools, comprising hundreds of individual properties, results in scrutiny of only a percentage of properties within the pools. A small strip mall, for instance, built over citizen objections in a neighborhood wetland would never rise to the point of review by the bond rating agency and the mortgage pool originator. That is not to say there is no environmental impact statement associated with the bond documentation. But these statements never given more than a once-over glance. They are throw-away fine print.

I'd wager, furthermore, that the engineering cartel-- formed of the array of consultants feeding from the Growth Machine-- is paid handsomely to conform environmental statements in mortgage backed derivatives through the happy, mutual fluffing in the revolving door between regulators and the regulated communities. Simply, Wall Street is agnostic to the outcome of debt underlying America's environmental crises so long as the cash flow is positive and within the parameters of obligations.

"How would you impose costs on mortgage origination to stop suburban sprawl?" His frank answer was no surprise: impose financial penalties as close as possible to the developer, itself.

Comprehensive growth plans, like those required by the state of Florida, are not enough to discourage growth and development where it should not occur, to protect the health, safety and public welfare. The power of campaign contributions and corruption overwhelms the intent of laws and regulations.

Higher costs -- yes, a form of taxation-- could steer development away from speculation that has demonstrably harmed our environment and quality of life. There are many forms of taxation that are used to incentivize development, and many-- like tax increment financing-- are used to specifically encourage the kinds of suburban sprawl that ought to be condemned. But imposing financial costs to discourage suburban sprawl is not even on the radar.

There is too much sense in that, and of course, it doesn't fit in the profit models of big downtown law firms or campaign contributors who run production home builders, trade associations and other components of the Growth Machine. But if Democrats wanted to differentiate themselves from the economic catastrophe imposed on taxpayers by unsustainable growth, they would pay attention to more than the outrage of Wall Street executive compensation packages. Certain forms of economic development are toxic to the public interest. Tax policy as a financial lever should be used to stop the madness.


6 comments:

Anonymous said...

The New York Times recently published a front page story that described how Goldman Sachs sold CDO instruments i.e. "toxic waste" to stupid and gullible municipal officials. These stupid officials thought Goldman Sachs salesmen were their friends. Low and behold, Goldman Sachs and other Wall Street scum had designed the "products" so Goldman could profit when the "investments" collapsed. Goldman Sachs made Billions and the sheep got fleeched.

The three rating agencies were all accused of being in on the scam.

Now the public must pay more in taxes so Wall Street salesmen get bigger bonuses.

Anonymous said...

As stated in Eye On Miami many times, it is dumb to build in the Everglades when thousands of lots close to downtowns and close to mass transit sit empty.

There should be laws granting special favors to developers who renovate infill lots.

Anonymous said...

It would be pie in the sky thinking that any politician would sponsor such legislation. Barney Frank, Chris Dodd are dems and look what they did.
Both parties are corrupt and for us the right to preserve what is left and halt sprawl now, it looks like Hometown Democracy is the most viable alternative. With the local exceptions of Sorenson and possibly Giminez there are no champions of stopping the madness.
The electorate needs to wake the &%#k up and bring in neophyte politicians who are not savvy to the corrupt systems now in place.

CATO said...

If there was never any chance of FANNIE MAE, FREDDIE MAC or any other lender getting "bailed out" this mess would have never happened and if it did happen it would have been on a MUCH SMALLER scale.
But with the correct perception that the Feds would step in and bail their buddies out, the sky was the limit, mortgage standards where dropped and the rest is history.
I remember when you had to save for a 20% DP still today folks are getting in with 3% and no closing cost (and an $8000 check from Uncle Sam aka me and you). Droping the DP requirements and not thouroughly checking out buyers natrurally will lead to an inflationary spiral and subsequent DEBACLE.
Those municipal officials didn't give a crap cause it wasn't there money it was the serfs money (aka txpayer)

Anonymous said...

http://www.cspan.org/Watch/Media/2009/12/28/WJE/A/27820/Dean+Baker+Peter+Morici.aspx

Fascinating...worth watching

Anonymous said...

I don't believe you should use taxes as a weapon. There is something fundamentally wrong with that. I believe that any taxes imposed on developers would be passed through to the home buyer anyway. Just look at all the roads and infrastructure that Miami Developers bribe county commissioners with and consider those bribes as taxes. Who pays for that? We do. I think education, blogs like this, community organizers and campaign finance reform would go a lot farther, personally.

Love the blog. Thanks for all the hard work.