Lessons From the Past, Guidelines for
the Future
By Daniel Rose
November
2, 2012
It
has been my good fortune to have learned from a number of giants of our
time. Their message about the
importance of character and
competence—doing the right thing and doing it with professionalism—has been proven time and again. Learning not the “tricks of the trade”
but “the trade itself,” and earning a reputation for reliability and for
operational expertise have always been a winning combination.
Another
message is the importance of understanding the “conventional wisdom” of the
moment but also knowing when it is crucial to think “outside the box.” Our tendency is to assume that all
trends continue, but in the real world fluctuating economic cycles and
demographic changes, changes in public taste or values, and the occurrence of
“black swan” (unforeseeable) events do occur. Charles Mackay’s 1841 classic Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds—which should
be on every student’s required reading list but never is—tells of the “bubbles,”
manias and witch-hunts of the past and those that inevitably will occur in the
future. “Bernie Madoff,”
“sub-prime mortgages,” “Lehman Brothers”—these are stories with old plots but
new names.
In
America today, we are at economic and social inflection points whose timing and
impact are unclear, unlike the decades after World War II when my career began.
From
the mid 1970’s, when I first saw
116 acres of nearly empty fields across I-95 from the Pentagon, to the moment
in 1991 when Pentagon City received the Urban Land Institute award for the
nation’s best mixed use development, what I was doing seemed obvious. Similarly, developing office towers in
Boston’s burgeoning financial district in the 1970’s—when good sites, enthusiastic public
officials, plentiful prospective tenants and abundant mortgage money were all
available—seemed like “shooting
fish in a barrel,” as was my brother Fred’s development of residential towers
in Manhattan. No one would claim
that today’s paths are as clear.
At
this moment—Autumn 2012—the problems of the national economy are so formidable
that they overshadow everything else.
American resilience, flexibility and common sense ultimately will prevail.
But it may require a crisis and an aroused citizenry demanding that our
short-sighted legislators retreat from the destructive partisanship and resulting gridlock that
make it impossible for government to function effectively. Our excessive government expenditures
and inadequate tax revenue produce deficits that are not sustainable, and
Americans are worried.
To
make matters worse, public confidence in our national institutions is at an
all-time low. America is suffering from a profound crisis of authority; we have
little trust in the integrity or competence of our political leaders, our
bankers, our corporate chieftains, our educators, our news media, our law
courts, even our religious leaders.
When polls show a 10% public approval rating of the job
Congress is doing, one wonders on what planet that 10% is living.
Fears
of a “fiscal cliff”--$600 billion in automatic tax increases and governmental
spending cuts set for the end of this year—are already dampening private
spending, postponing business investment and coloring short term economic
decisions. Uncertainty about tax
rates, the continuity of
government programs and the threat of another governmental shutdown over a debt
ceiling increase encourage caution which weakens an already feeble recovery. Add negative external factors—a
worsening Eurozone crisis, slower growth in China and in emerging-market
economies, turmoil in the Middle East which may lead to higher oil prices—and
it is difficult to be optimistic in the short term. With interest rates historically low, government options are
few. After the 2012
elections, Congress will be under pressure to face the entitlement reform and increases in
revenue we desperately need to balance our budgets over time; but short term
pain seems likely.
The
pendulum always swings back eventually, however. 2015 is the year auto industry forecasters predict the first
16 million car sales per year since the financial crisis began; and just as
current pessimism can be a “self-fulfilling prophecy,” so can auto industry
optimism. Volkswagen is opening a
new plant in Chattanooga, planning to double its U.S. sales. Honda is expanding production
facilities in Greensburg, Indiana; Kia is expanding in Georgia, and Hyundai in
Alabama—all these facilities will be ready before 2015.
Goldman
Sachs expects housing starts to reach 1.4 million in 2015, up from 700,000 this
year. The durable goods sector of the economy—which produces products that last
more than three years—also is preparing for an upsurge in demand in 2015. The multiplier effect will be
impressive. By 2015, personal debt
is likely to be reduced, home equity values increased and, most important, America
is predicted by some to achieve energy independence from Middle East oil by
then, with a corresponding lowering of oil prices.
Although
Europe may face an economic and social “lost decade”—as Japan did in the 1990’s—our economy can rebound if our legislators make the short term, intermediate term
and long term compromises and
trade-offs
indicated in “Simpson-Bowles” thinking ($3 trillion in budget cuts and $1
trillion in added revenues over the coming decade). Reduced military budgets will require informed discussion
and deliberation about our engagement in “wars of necessity vs. wars of choice”
(Richard Haas) and about fighting our battles by “hard vs. soft power” (Joseph
Nye).
When
Americans spend less on consumer
goods and invest more on education, scientific research and public
infrastructure (and infostructure); when we borrow less and save more; when an
appropriate balance between “public goods” and “private goods” is restored; when
“equality of opportunity” again becomes an accepted American goal, and when our
politicians are no longer openly for sale to the highest bidder, we can regain
our momentum toward a constructive future.
No
crystal ball is unclouded and there are no easy answers, but we must make
prudent “guesstimates” and assess reasonable probabilities. In the world of real estate, Joel
Kotkin believes that the suburbanization of America will continue; but Alan Ehrenhalt points to trends showing
exurbia shrinking, suburban middle classes re-attracted to the city and some
inner city poor moving to older suburbs. If the tax-deductibility of home
mortgage interest is lessened or mortgage lending standards are tightened, the
negative impact on suburbs will be significant. Richard Florida feels that future workers will change jobs
more frequently and will prefer the flexibility that renting homes rather than
owning them permits. Edward
Glaeser praises high density center city development for its face-to-face
interaction, stimulus to creativity, competition, social and economic diversity
and social mobility. Everyone
predicts continuing gentrification (Harlem is now 10% middle income non-black
and Jane Jacobs would be dismayed to see her economically-diverse West Village
now commanding the highest rents in New York). That future development will be ecologically sound and
environmentally sensitive is a given.
My
own belief is that high density rental housing—with smaller apartments, smaller
rooms and lower rents—built over
suburban mass transit stations (with retail and recreational facilities
adjoining) will be an increasingly popular model. The
appeal of housing, retail, recreational and cultural facilities in downtown
office and industrial centers will
continue to increase; Rose
Associates’ current highest quality residential conversion of the 66-story, one
million sq. ft. Art Deco office
tower at 70 Pine Street near Wall Street is an example. The conversion of unused rail
facilities into Lower Manhattan’s wildly successful “High Line” is another.
Over
the long term, the mutually reinforcing factors of increasing automation and
globalization will transform American society. The automation story is told eloquently in the recent N.Y.
Times headline “Skilled Work Without the Worker”; and globalization’s impact on
sending jobs overseas is universally recognized. The prospect of well-paying high tech and managerial employment
for the well-educated few and low-paying “service” employment for the
less-educated is a challenge our
society must face constructively.
Educating
our youth appropriately in light of the new socio-economic patterns requires
dramatic new educational thinking.
Stimulating
economic growth and increasing national income while apportioning the proceeds
appropriately require new
economic thinking.
Balancing
the needs of the young, the old and the underprivileged while providing
necessary incentives and rewards for those producing our income require new
social thinking.
A) Education
In 1870, when British factory owners found that their
illiterate workers could not compete effectively against literate German factory
workers, and when British politicians realized that the Reform Bills of 1832
and 1867 had given the vote to illiterate farmers who could vote against them,
Britain passed its first compulsory education law not to benefit the workers and farmers but to help the nation (i.e. the rich and powerful). In 21st century America, the
1% must realize that an educated, motivated and productive 99% is in their
best interest in an internationally competitive world.
Universal pre-school education—which instills in a
child the self-discipline, self-confidence, curiosity and future-mindedness
that are necessary pre-conditions for later educational success—is an important
first step. And the message
must continue through elementary school to avoid “Head Start fade-out.” The rest of the world—especially China
and India—is increasingly providing good pre-schooling. Europe already does—98% of Finland’s
children receive excellent pre-schooling while fewer than half of American
children do.
High quality teachers (drawn from the top 10% of the
academic pool, as in Finland, rather than the bottom 25% of the academic pool,
as in the U.S.) are key ingredients in the educational process at all
levels. Pay, perquisites and
prestige should be high enough to
attract and keep the best teachers.
Teachers must be held to high entry standards, given opportunity and
encouragement to continue their professional development, and appropriate recognition for outstanding performance.
When some are determined by fair and widely-approved methods to be clearly
inadequate, they should be removed from teaching. (In Europe, teachers are considered professionals; in
America they are viewed as union members, and treated accordingly.)
All children should be encouraged to advance to the
highest level of their potential.
At the high school level, German- and Swiss-style
vocational and apprenticeship options should be offered to those desiring them,
and we must rethink the whole question of education and “life-preparation” for
those for whom conventional schooling has not been successful.
At the college level, we should encourage the
expansion and improvement of community colleges and junior colleges, which can
be either “final” or “transitional” to four year colleges.
A “bigger bang for the educational buck” should be a
national priority, with higher quality and lower costs achieved by longer
school days and school years; so should an end to “lifetime tenure” for senior
professors and more efficient use of faculty, including on-line education used
where applicable and “live” teaching available for face-to-face interaction
when discussion, questioning, debate and personal intellectual involvement are
indicated.
Higher education in the sciences (four year college,
graduate and postgraduate) should be available without cost—as a national
investment—for all who qualify.
Expanded intramural athletics and an end to
inter-collegiate athletics would lower college costs by as much as 10%, and
produce healthier college students and fewer who later become “couch potatoes.”
Producing an educated public with the knowledge and
skills required in the 21st century should be our highest national priority,
and the necessary expenditure to achieve that must be considered our most
important investment in our future.
B) Our Economy
How to stimulate economic growth and how to apportion
the proceeds appropriately are the questions our politicians should be
debating, not “big government” vs. “small government” but how to achieve smart
government—transparent, efficient, respected for its fairness and wisdom. We should consider revenue producers
like the V.A.T. (Value Added Tax), universal in Europe, that tax consumption
rather than production without lessening incentives for high earners (with the
proceeds specifically dedicated to scientific research programs, an
infrastructure bank, etc.).
Since we cannot indefinitely distribute (or
redistribute) wealth we have not created, we must begin by allowing and
encouraging our free market economy to “make the pie bigger.” This requires: a) national savings guided by our
financial sector to productive use by our innovators and entrepreneurs; b)
incentives and rewards for wealth producers and c) necessary investment in
human capital, industrial capital, mineral capital and social capital
(infrastructure, institutions, etc.).
The proceeds (the U.S. $16 trillion GDP) of our “farm”
should then be allocated (by market forces or by government dictate): a) to
reward our “farmers”; b) to replenish our “seed corn,” and c) to distribute to
“others.”
In the past, the American economy grew because we
reinvested much of our proceeds in “the future.” Today we live for the present,
and consume not only all we produce but all we can borrow from others or steal
from the next generation by increasing the national debt and incurring
multi-trillion dollar unfunded pension liabilities.
The economist Arthur Okun wished to be remembered for
Okun’s Law which states “That which is not sustainable will not be
sustained.” Where are you, Arthur,
when we really need you?
C)
Social
Thinking
Although our cyclical economic problems can be dealt
with by short term stimulus and long term rebalancing, our social problems are structural
and more complex.
An important one is the growing stratification in
American life—not by color, religion or ethnicity but by education. The less-educated have demonstrably
fewer “life chances” in employment, health, family stability and life
satisfaction generally. One
quarter of U.S. students do not finish high school, and some 40% have no
post-high school training. How
they will fare in an increasingly competitive world is problematic.
In that competitive world, America appears to be
facing a “new normal” of inadequate job creation for our growing population. The
resulting levels of unemployment and underemployment will likely have profound
social effects.
When Work
Disappears by William Julius Wilson
and Citizens Without Work, the 1930’s classic by E. Wight Bakke, describe the
destructive psychological impact of long term unemployment, and Nobel Laureate
Edmund Phelps’ Rewarding Work
discusses the degree to which our employment—or lack of it—defines us. Providing employment, no matter how
uneconomic, is less destructive than creating a culture of dependency, which
demoralizes and immobilizes its victims. Dealing constructively with this will
be one of our great challenges in the years ahead.
Conclusion:
Future
historians may describe the period from 1945 to 2000 as “America’s Golden
Age.” During that time, “American”
was the thing to be, New York was the place to be, real estate development was
one of the things to do; and I was fortunate to have it all.
Born
the week of the 1929 Great Crash, I celebrated my 70th birthday
shortly before the World Trade Center terrorist attack; and I experienced all
the national moods in between.
The
“we’re all in this together” mindset of the Great Depression; the cocky
determination of WWII; the G.I. Bill and Levittown optimism of the decades
following the war; the sense of relentless progress in the Civil Rights
advances; the social turmoil of the hippy, Beatnik late ‘60’s; the smug complacency of our economic
advances in the ‘80’s and ‘90’s; the troubled soul-searching after the George
W. Bush years; the anxiety of the Great Recession. All were temporary reflections of the conditions of their
time; but the fundamental characteristics of American society remained
constant.
The
current widespread pessimism and loss of self-confidence America is
experiencing will pass in due course; but I believe it will require some upheaval
or the emergence of a charismatic new leader to galvanize us into action.
The
self-absorption and focus on narrow material self-interest that pervades all
aspects of American life today is, I hope, temporary. A more communal-minded, future-minded ethos, with less
emphasis on material possessions and more on life experiences and satisfactions
will prevail in time. And our
young people may focus less on the verb “to have” and more on “to do” and “to
be.” With such values, our rich
won’t deny proper free school breakfasts to our poorest school children; a da
Vinci, a Mme. Curie or an Einstein born to poor parents will have the
opportunity to develop his/her God-given talents; the vitality of our cities,
the dynamism of our cultural life and our justifiable pride in the justice and
fairness of our society will again be the envy of the world.
Printed
on every U.S. dollar bill (above the pyramid) is the motto Annuit Coeptis—“God
has favored our undertaking.” Our
Founding Fathers believed it, and I do, too—now and for the future.
Narrow
material self-interest reigns today, but as Shelley said, “If Winter comes can
Spring be far behind?”
(Daniel
Rose’s talks may be found on www.danielrose.org)
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