Future of Economy according to Fed

This is good news and bad news for Coral Gables.  The housing recession will continue unabated so property values are not going anywhere.  The city will be under pressure to increase taxes, no doubt.  Growth may increase the income and assets of the wealthy, and that will help the to 15 percent of so of our residents.  The retail district may see a slow increase in sales. All in all, the outlook for several years is not bright.   Any attempt to reduce federal spending will have a bad impact on the economy–stimulus is still needed.

The U.S. economy will expand at a 3.5 percent to 4 percent rate during 2011, as it is “increasingly supported by private spending,” Rosengren said in his prepared comments. Growth won’t top 4 percent because the housing market’s recovery is likely to be weaker than usual, given the tightening of lending standards and high vacancy rates, according to Rosengren.

“If housing-related growth is not going to boost the recovery this time around, we may need policy — particularly monetary policy — to continue playing a stimulative role,” said Rosengren, who doesn’t vote on monetary policy this year.

Growth of 4 percent would still leave the unemployment rate close to 9 percent at the end of 2011, a level that’s “far above anyone’s estimate of full employment,” Rosengren said.

via Rosengren Says Stimulus Needed to Lower Jobless Rate (Update1) – Bloomberg.com.

The ECONOMIST on Public Sector Unions

Stated quite succinctly…

This should guide the future for the city of Coral Gables–it is time to really change the benefits, the unions should cooperate, and, if not, at their own risk and that of the politician(s) and managers who keep coddling them.

The immediate battle will be over benefits, not pay… America’s states have as much as $5 trillion in unfunded pension liabilities. Historic liabilities have to be honoured (and properly accounted for, rather than hidden off the government’s balance-sheet). But there is no excuse for continuing them. Sixty-five should be a minimum age for retirement for people who spend their lives in classrooms and offices; and new civil servants should be switched to defined-contribution pensions.

via The public sector unions: The battle ahead | The Economist.

Slesnick’s Election Platform

Thanking the mayor for his new year’s greeting by email, he listed the following as his apparent platform (New Year’s resolutions) for running again this year,

  • Control costs to insure that municipal services are affordable to all;
  • Encourage and promote the smart growth of our business district as we emerge from the current economic recession;
  • Recruit and welcome new businesses to revitalize our economy and to create jobs;
  • Work with the School Board to improve and expand public education opportunities for all Gables students;
  • Focus on the development and promotion of cultural assets and international relationships.

Did the County Administrator Say “No Pasa Nada”? More on Miami-Dade Transit Incompetence and Mismanagement

More proof that government in Miami-Dade is fundamentally incompetent, corrupt and indifferent to the taxpayers.

The citizens seem to expect no better than what they are getting–and they are getting no better than the scale of an underdeveloped country.

A federal audit made public late Monday sharply criticizes Miami-Dade Transit for shoddy financial management and weak internal controls — including improper accounting for bus fare boxes and a failure to document how federal grant money has been spent.

The audit comes two months after the Federal Transit Administration took the extraordinary step of suspending grant payments totaling about $182 million to the county-run transit agency.

In a letter to county transit director Harpal Kapoor, Yvette Taylor, regional administrator for the FTA in Atlanta, called the cutoff of funding a “rare action” and said it was “taken to protect the taxpayers’ dollars.”

She said auditors found “very serious financial management oversight and internal control issues.”

via Federal audit blasts Miami-Dade Transit for shoddy oversight – Miami-Dade – MiamiHerald.com.