Incomes Fell in Miami/Fort Lauderdale in 2009: More Bad Economic Signs

More not so great news for the Miami/Fort Lauderdale region.  Shouldn’t it be harder for cities to keep increasing taxes with per capita incomes falling so much?  Miami/Fort Lauderdale per capital incomes fell by 3.9% from 2008 to 2009.   Per capita incomes increased by only 0.9% in 2008

Income declined in 223 metro areas last year, increased in 134 and was unchanged in nine regions. Even though prices declined last year — down 0.2% from a year earlier as measured by the national price index for personal consumption expenditures — incomes fell even more. On average, personal income dropped 1.8% in 2009, following a 2.7% increase in 2007.

via U.S. Incomes Tumbled in 2009 – Real Time Economics – WSJ.

Haiti: Lots of Political Show, Little Aid So Far

A little more evidence that the international community is failing the urgent needs in Haiti.  The international aid community spends too much time on organizing themselves, trying to control in detail the projects and trying to give their own agencies a favorable look.

Bill Clinton said Friday that international donors are still reluctant to make good on billions of dollars in pledges for Haiti’s post-earthquake reconstruction.

…the former U.S. president told The Associated Press he hopes the presentation of $300 million worth of projects at the Aug. 17 meeting of the commission he co-chairs with Haiti’s prime minister will help open their wallets.

“We’re going for very specific projects at the next meeting and then we’re going to make another run at ’em and see what happens,” Clinton told AP during a two-day visit to the quake-ravaged country. “We just want to get the show on the road.”

Frustrations are running high nearly seven months after the quake, which killed a government-estimated 300,000 people. Reconstruction remains all but stalled as 1.6 million people remain homeless and rubble continues to choke thoroughfares in the capital and surrounding areas.

via The Canadian Press: Bill Clinton: Donors still holding out on billion in pledges for Haiti reconstruction.

More Evidence that Coral Gables Can’t Count on the US Economy

More evidence that Coral Gables and South Florida will face continuing economic problems.  The Coral Gables’ budget should be adjusted accordingly.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. lowered its economic growth outlook for Japan and the U.S., citing the likelihood of a “significant falloff” from stimulus measures and slowing export growth for Japan. The U.S. recovery is losing a “considerable amount of momentum,” it said.

via Goldman Sachs Lowers Forecast for Japan, U.S. Growth – BusinessWeek.

Economic Future of Coral Gables: A Pessimistic View

What are the prospects for the economy of the City Beautiful?

The slow return of the US economy from the worst economic recession since the Great Depression is raising strong concerns that the US may follow a slow up-and-down growth for many years to come rather than a sustained expansion.  Slow growth is already causing a permanent loss of employment and skills of those unemployed for a long time.  Families are suffering the loss in the values of their homes and savings.

There is a continuing weakness of  small and medium banks from the financial crisis.  The large “to big to fail” banks are still adjusting their business to the new economic realities.  There is even a risk that the US will have another financial crisis in a few years because of more risky behavior and weak capital of the banks and the partial reform of financial regulations.

Coral Gables is not an island unto itself, but it is affected directly or indirectly by the following prevailing economic factors.

  • The economic stagnation is hurting the retail sales  and commercial property values in Coral Gables.  Retail sales are not expected to return until consumers fix their own personal economies;
  • There are restraints on the availability of financing for the construction of new commercial and residential real estate
  • The State of Florida will not have money to transfer to municipalities (see this year’s estimated budget in which these monies fell);
  • The city still has relatively high cost municipal services;
  • There are limits on benefits from city enterprises such as the Biltmore Hotel, the parking system, the golf courses, the sanitary sewer system and the Coral Gables Country Club;
  • The city may not be able to keep up with the maintenance and replacement of  city infrastructure because of budget limitations;
  • Businesses in the city, based on administrative, legal, marketing, media, insurance and financial services, are relatively stable but slow growers;
  • The city has limited reserves for hurricane response;
  • The antiquate tax system of the State discourages new residential owners with its high property taxes; and
  • A county environment with high taxes and structural unemployment casts a pall over Coral Gables.