The most serious collateral damage from the
Such an approach could harm both the local and national economies for decades to come. read more »
EnvironmentAlaska: Caribou Commons Or America's Lost Ace?
by Joel Kotkin 08/03/2010
The most serious collateral damage from the Such an approach could harm both the local and national economies for decades to come. read more »
Subjects:
The Need to Expand Personal Mobility
by Wendell Cox 07/08/2010
Few books in recent memory have started from as optimistic or solid a foundation as Reinventing the Automobile: Personal Urban Mobility for the 21st Century. Reinventing the Automobile conveys a strong message that improved personal mobility is necessary and desirable: read more » "Little Monsters"? Children and the Environment
by Zina Klapper 07/05/2010
The idea has bubbled around the edges of the environmental pond for a while: choosing to be childfree expressly for the purpose of reducing one's carbon footprint. read more »
Subjects:
Follow The Money On Development Deals
by Rick Harrison 06/30/2010
“Follow the money” became a household phrase after the 1976 movie that told the story of Watergate, All the Presidents Men. Personal experiences over four decades in the consulting industry, working to create sustainable developments, often bring the phrase to mind. read more » The Limits Of The Green Machine
by Joel Kotkin 05/25/2010
Environmentalism is strangely detached from the public's economic goals. The awful oil spill in the Gulf--as well as the recent coal mine disaster in West Virginia--has added spring to the step of America's hugely influential environmental lobby. After years of hand-wringing over global warming (aka climate change), the greens now have an issue that will play to legitimate public concerns for weeks and months ahead. This is as it should be. Strong support for environmental regulation--starting particularly under our original "green president," Richard Nixon--has been based on the protection of public health and safety, as well as the preservation of America's wild spaces. read more » Jobs, Environmental Regulation, and Dead French Economists
by Bill Watkins 05/13/2010
The debate over the repeal of California’s global-warming regulation, AB32, has degenerated into a shouting match, each side claiming economic ruin if the other side wins. A couple of long-dead French economists can help us think about the debate. The great French economist Leon Walras (1834-1910) showed that perfect markets result in an allocation of goods and services that can’t be improved on, in the sense that no one could be made better off without someone else being made worse off. read more »
Subjects:
The New E.D. -- Environmental Density
by Rick Harrison 05/05/2010
Developers often have an E.D. problem and are not even aware of it. No, not the type of E.D. temporarily cured with Viagra. Environmental Density — E.D. — is the measurement of the impact of man made construction on a site. In simple terms, E.D. is the average per acre volume of impervious surface due to land development construction. It has two very important impacts, one environmental, and one financial. One acre of land is 43,560 square feet. The lower the E.D. — square foot of impervious surface area divided by 43,560 — the lower the surface area of manmade structures that divert rain run-off, and the less environmental damage. read more »
Subjects:
A Carbon Added Tax, Not Cap and Trade
by Aaron M. Renn 05/03/2010
Paul Krugman devoted a recent lengthy New York Times Magazine article to the promotion of a disastrous “cap and trade” regime for reducing carbon emissions. Though he doesn't outright endorse it, he strongly suggests that the Waxman-Markey bill that passed the House would be acceptable to him. Krugman then proceeds to pooh-pooh the carbon tax idea, one that I believe has far more merit. Cap and trade would be a debacle for a slew of reasons. The most important is that it won't even reduce carbon emissions. read more » Power in Los Angeles: The High Price of Going Green
by Wendell Cox 04/09/2010
Greece and Los Angeles are up against a financial wall. Los Angeles had its bond rating cut on April 7. Greece managed to hold out until April 9. Greece has endured public employee strikes as it has attempted to reign in bloated public payrolls. Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa drew the ire of the city's unions and city council opposition in proposing two-day a week furloughs for city employees. A Bankrupt Los Angeles? read more »
Subjects:
Jobs Will Rule November
by Joel Kotkin 04/05/2010
Health care lays behind him, financial reform and climate change ahead, but for President Barack Obama--and his opponents--there is only one real issue: jobs. The recent employment reports signal some small gains, yet the widespread prognosis for a slow, near-jobless recovery threatens the president and his party more than any major domestic challenge. read more » |
Subscribe to NG ArticlesThe Coming of Neo-FeudalismJoel 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 SuburbiaInfinite 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
BooksAuthored 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. Recent popular content
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