An article in The Wall Street Journal discussed attempts to merge local governments in Michigan. While efforts such as these gain wide support because of the belief that they will save money, there evidence shows the opposite. read more »
Blogs
Atlanta Resoundingly Rejects Transit Tax
Atlanta area voters said "no" to a proposed $7 billion transportation tax that was promoted as a solution to the metropolitan area's legendary traffic congestion, despite a campaign in which supporters outspent opponents by more than 500 to one. read more »
China Personal Vehicles Now More than US
China Web quotes the nation's Ministry of Public Security to the effect that China's personal vehicle fleet (automobiles and motorcycles) reached 217 million at the end of June. This would place China ahead of the United States, which had approximately 200 million personal vehicles in 2010 and led the world for perhaps for most, if not all of the last century. read more »
Houston's Walled Garden
My friend Neal and I were in a tall building recently looking out over the city, and noted that there is an interesting phenomenon in Houston. There are now enough tall buildings to almost outline a new zone. read more »
Transportation for Tomorrow: Driverless Cars
Economist Clifford Winston of the Brookings Institution outlines the surface transportation system of the future in a Wall Street Journal commentary, "Paving the Way for Diverless Cars." Winston notes "a much better technological solution is on the horizon" than high speed rail "as an effective way to reduce highway congestion" as the Obama administration in Washington and the Brown administration in Sacramento contend. read more »
Will New York’s Economy Strangle Itself With Success?
Big cities have been on a bit of a roll in recent years. But sometimes you can have too much success, as we may be seeing in the case of New York. This week the New York Times reported that finance firms are moving mid-level jobs away from Wall Street to places like Salt Lake City and Charlotte. read more »
The Economist on the Costs of London's Green Belt
The Economist reminds readers of the economics of housing (or for that matter, oil or any other good or service): constraining the supply of a good or service in demand raises its price. In a 14-page feature on London, The Economist decries the high cost of housing in London. read more »
Portland Mixed-Use Condo Converts to Rentals, Mixed Use Nixed
The Oregonian reports that suburban Hillsboro's first mixed use condominium development is no more. Washington Street Station, was built near the suburb's small but historic downtown (see Note on Hillsboro). read more »
Core Cities Growing: Available Data Indicates Domestic Migration Losses
The Coming of Neo-Feudalism
Joel Kotkin's newest book The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class is now available to order. Learn more about this title and Joel's other books.
Infinite Suburbia
Infinite Suburbia is the culmination of the MIT Norman B. Leventhal Center for Advanced Urbanism's yearlong study of the future of suburban development. Find out more.
Recent blog posts
- Feudal Future Podcast — Crossroads: The Democratic Party in Transition
- The EU's Fury at Trump's Tariffs Is Hypocritical Insanity
- Feudal Future Podcast — Trump's Tariffs and the Future of US-Canada Relations
- Feudal Future Podcast — Can DOGE Fix Our Bloated Government?
- Home is Where the Chabad Is
- Feudal Future Podcast — El Futuro es Latino Town Hall
- Feudal Future Podcast — Populism Unpacked: Voices from the Heartland
- Feudal Future Podcast — Challenges and Solutions for California's Economy
- Feudal Future Podcast — Breaking Down Barriers in Housing Development
- Feudal Future Podcast — Changing Education and the Power of Tech
Books
Authored by Aaron Renn, The Urban State of Mind: Meditations on the City is the first Urbanophile e-book, featuring provocative essays on the key issues facing our cities, including innovation, talent attraction and brain drain, global soft power, sustainability, economic development, and localism.
Read Michael Lind's new book, Hell to Pay: How the Suppression of Wages is Destroying America.
Recent popular content
- The "Great Bones" of Rust Belt Cities
- Retrofitting the Dream: Housing in the 21st Century, A New Report
- New Job Market Report from Jobbait Adds New Data
- Asians: America's Fastest Growing Minority
- Jakarta Closing Population Gap with Tokyo
- U.S. Residential Building Permits by Market Size: 2023
- France and America's Cold War
- The Profoundly Misunderstood Housing Affordability Crisis
Recommended Books
- The Next Hundred Million: America in 2050 By Joel Kotkin - Available Now
- The City: A Global History by Joel Kotkin
- Why is construction so backward? Co-authored by Ian Abley
- Millennial Momentum: How a New Generation Is Remaking America by Morley Winograd and Michael D. Hais
- War on the Dream: How Anti-Sprawl Policy Threatens the Quality of Life by Wendell Cox
- Remembering the Twentieth Century Limited by Matthew Stevenson
- An April Across America By Matthew Stevenson
Blogroll and Partner Sites
- Burgh Diaspora
- Center for Economic Research and Forecasting
- China Urban Development Blog
- Chris Bradford - Austin Contrarian
- Houston Strategies
- LA Observed
- Multiplier Effect: Levy Economics Institute
- NDN
- Newsalert
- The Rural Blog
- The Urbanophile
- Patrick.net - Housing Crash
- Joel Kotkin
- Praxis Strategy Group
- American Association of Retirement Communities