Yesterday, the U.S. Census released its latest population estimates for 2008.
Census estimates the state's 2008 population at 36.75 million with annual growth below 400,000 for six consecutive years.
The California Department of Finance (DOF) recently released a 2008 estimate of 38.15 million.
I trust the Census estimates more than DOF, but the truth may be somewhere in between. I wonder if this 1.4 million population estimate gap is part of the reason the state is continuously surprised by how little tax revenue is coming in.
Of course, I can't resist pointing out that the PPIC/UC-Davis Delta research team is standing by their 39 million estimate of the state's 2008 population.
A discussion of economic, business, and environmental issues of importance in the Central Valley.
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Fresno Falcons Fold Due to Recession
http://http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081223/A_NEWS/812230321
The damage is spreading. I have noticed attendance at Pacific basketball (despite a good team), and the Sacramento Kings (not such a good team) is lagging as well.
I wonder if Laura King Moon of the SWC will blame this on the Delta Smelt too?
The damage is spreading. I have noticed attendance at Pacific basketball (despite a good team), and the Sacramento Kings (not such a good team) is lagging as well.
I wonder if Laura King Moon of the SWC will blame this on the Delta Smelt too?
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Who's Being Unscientific?
Some snips from the PPIC's Ellen Hanak in Alex Breitler's Record article about my challenge of the PPIC's infamous peripheral canal study.
They had a press conference for their study's release, and promoted it around the state. They didn't release the full study (including the appendices that described their methodology) until months after the press releases. I am told people who asked critical questions were dismissed and told to look in the (then unpublished) appendices. Lots of touting themselves, but can't say much for scientific integrity.
I posted a review of their study on the web, and gave copies to 4 people (non-press) who I thought might be interested. I never presented this until invited last week, and that presentation led to the lone media article in the Record. The review spread on it's own, not because of any PR by me.
They made up a fake reference for a key variable (population) in their study. They provided no references for recycling and desalination costs, and when pressed admit they are using their judgement over volumes of published studies. In other words, they are making stuff up. Their remedy for their errors is to personally attack me, and say they don't have time to consider alternative model runs. So much for academic integrity and the scientific quest for truth.
I cite reliable sources for everything.
-----
People keep asking me how/why I wrote this. In September, two people asked me on different occasions (Bob Ferguson, a Delta farmer; Margit Aramburu, Director of the Natural Resources Institute at Pacific) if I would be interested and able to do a study that placed a dollar value on the numerous Delta environmental and other benefits that were uncalculated in the PPIC report. I told them I would give the PPIC report a detailed read to identify exactly what had been omitted, and get back to them.
I read the details of their report and recognized the false population forecast due to my familiarity with this issue. I emailed Ellen Hanak and Jay Lund (principal PPIC authors) to express concern about the population number, and I was told that it might be high, but wouldn't affect their results. After that I got suspicious about the way they calculated desalination cost, did some research, and made some back-of-the-envelope calculations to see if it was a big error. I sent them another message with concerns and calculations to show the error was potentially large. After another very unsatifactory response, I posted my review on the web, emailed a copy to Margit and Bob, and distributed a few hard copies on-campus. A few weeks (and many downloads off our website) later, I emailed a copy to David Zetland, because I enjoy his Aguanomics blog and thought he might be interested.
That's the big PR campaign Ellen Hanak calls "touting." Comparing this to the PPIC media campaign, I guess Ellen must be touting herself for the Nobel prize.
"He's done back-of-the-envelope (calculations) and is touting that as some great science," said Ellen Hanak, director of research with the San Francisco-based PPIC.Which one of us is touting bad research as great science?
She said the PPIC did not plan to rerun its analysis using Michael's numbers. That would be time-consuming.
They had a press conference for their study's release, and promoted it around the state. They didn't release the full study (including the appendices that described their methodology) until months after the press releases. I am told people who asked critical questions were dismissed and told to look in the (then unpublished) appendices. Lots of touting themselves, but can't say much for scientific integrity.
I posted a review of their study on the web, and gave copies to 4 people (non-press) who I thought might be interested. I never presented this until invited last week, and that presentation led to the lone media article in the Record. The review spread on it's own, not because of any PR by me.
They made up a fake reference for a key variable (population) in their study. They provided no references for recycling and desalination costs, and when pressed admit they are using their judgement over volumes of published studies. In other words, they are making stuff up. Their remedy for their errors is to personally attack me, and say they don't have time to consider alternative model runs. So much for academic integrity and the scientific quest for truth.
I cite reliable sources for everything.
-----
People keep asking me how/why I wrote this. In September, two people asked me on different occasions (Bob Ferguson, a Delta farmer; Margit Aramburu, Director of the Natural Resources Institute at Pacific) if I would be interested and able to do a study that placed a dollar value on the numerous Delta environmental and other benefits that were uncalculated in the PPIC report. I told them I would give the PPIC report a detailed read to identify exactly what had been omitted, and get back to them.
I read the details of their report and recognized the false population forecast due to my familiarity with this issue. I emailed Ellen Hanak and Jay Lund (principal PPIC authors) to express concern about the population number, and I was told that it might be high, but wouldn't affect their results. After that I got suspicious about the way they calculated desalination cost, did some research, and made some back-of-the-envelope calculations to see if it was a big error. I sent them another message with concerns and calculations to show the error was potentially large. After another very unsatifactory response, I posted my review on the web, emailed a copy to Margit and Bob, and distributed a few hard copies on-campus. A few weeks (and many downloads off our website) later, I emailed a copy to David Zetland, because I enjoy his Aguanomics blog and thought he might be interested.
That's the big PR campaign Ellen Hanak calls "touting." Comparing this to the PPIC media campaign, I guess Ellen must be touting herself for the Nobel prize.
Sunday papers
This certainly caught my eye in the Record. Alex Breitler did a good job capturing the essence of the issue. More on this article later.
The water contractors give their Delta point of view in the Sacramento Bee Forum. This article is unbelievable. Apparantly, she thinks the recession was caused by reducing Delta water exports. I guess she missed the whole sub-prime loan thing.
Jim Wasserman convenes a good housing panel in the Sac Bee Business section. I don't agree with every little detail, but overall this is one of the best discussions from people in the business I have seen.
Update 12/22: I just sent this letter to the editor to the Bee regarding the water contractors piece:
Much like the Bush administration used the tragedy of 911 (perpetrated by Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan) to justify the invasion of Iraq, Laura King Moon (Many Delta regulations miss the mark, 12/21/2008) is using the hardships of the recession (caused by sub-prime lending and the housing collapse) to justify environmentally destructive water exports from the Delta.
Ms. Moon implies that this year’s water export reductions to farms is increasing unemployment in Mendota (outside Fresno) and driving families to the food bank. However, a look at the data reveals a very different story.
The most recent employment report released by the state EDD shows the farm sector in Fresno County actually added 200 jobs over the past year, while non-farm jobs in Fresno County declined by 4,000. Construction, real estate and wholesale/retail trade account for 3,600 lost jobs in the past year, directly tied to the sub-prime mortgage crisis and resulting recession.
Since the housing peak, about 5,000 construction jobs have been lost in Fresno County, devastating communities like Mendota. Meanwhile, farming has been the 2nd fastest growing sector in the County, trailing only healthcare.
The water contractors give their Delta point of view in the Sacramento Bee Forum. This article is unbelievable. Apparantly, she thinks the recession was caused by reducing Delta water exports. I guess she missed the whole sub-prime loan thing.
Jim Wasserman convenes a good housing panel in the Sac Bee Business section. I don't agree with every little detail, but overall this is one of the best discussions from people in the business I have seen.
Update 12/22: I just sent this letter to the editor to the Bee regarding the water contractors piece:
Much like the Bush administration used the tragedy of 911 (perpetrated by Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan) to justify the invasion of Iraq, Laura King Moon (Many Delta regulations miss the mark, 12/21/2008) is using the hardships of the recession (caused by sub-prime lending and the housing collapse) to justify environmentally destructive water exports from the Delta.
Ms. Moon implies that this year’s water export reductions to farms is increasing unemployment in Mendota (outside Fresno) and driving families to the food bank. However, a look at the data reveals a very different story.
The most recent employment report released by the state EDD shows the farm sector in Fresno County actually added 200 jobs over the past year, while non-farm jobs in Fresno County declined by 4,000. Construction, real estate and wholesale/retail trade account for 3,600 lost jobs in the past year, directly tied to the sub-prime mortgage crisis and resulting recession.
Since the housing peak, about 5,000 construction jobs have been lost in Fresno County, devastating communities like Mendota. Meanwhile, farming has been the 2nd fastest growing sector in the County, trailing only healthcare.
Friday, December 19, 2008
Unemployment Friday
The latest numbers from EDD are out today. They are predictably dismal.
Seasonally adjusted non-farm payrolls decline 42,000 statewide in one month, led by a much smaller than usual holiday, retail hiring surge. Losses are also seen further back up the supply chain, and that hurts places like Stockton, a metro area that is seeing recent good news in the transportation sector evaporate quickly in a broader recession.
In the Bay Area, Silicon Valley is starting to slide, job losses are hitting in computer manufacturing and related tech fields. This is the beginning of a trend we see continuing through 2009. San Jose dodged the worst of the housing recession, but the 2nd half of the recession will definitely be felt.
The Sacramento area posts another weak report. Like everywhere, retail is weaker than expected, construction continues to decline, as is leisure/hospitality. This metro includes Lake Tahoe, and we should be seeing seasonal growth in hospitality. This is the number to watch for next months, December report. Sacramento also posted a big decline in professional and business services, with a significant part of the decline showing up in the higher end professional fields, rather than declines in clerical/temp type positions. If this becomes a trend, that is bad news. Of course, everyone is watching the state budget standoff. We have not seen large scale govt job losses yet, and may not see them if furloughs (temporary pay cuts) are widespread. Thus, the job losses may be limited but the income effects and agency budget cuts will have significant ripple effects through the capital region's private sector.
Still looking for good news in these reports, but haven't found any yet (unless, not being any worse than we expected counts as good news these days).
Seasonally adjusted non-farm payrolls decline 42,000 statewide in one month, led by a much smaller than usual holiday, retail hiring surge. Losses are also seen further back up the supply chain, and that hurts places like Stockton, a metro area that is seeing recent good news in the transportation sector evaporate quickly in a broader recession.
In the Bay Area, Silicon Valley is starting to slide, job losses are hitting in computer manufacturing and related tech fields. This is the beginning of a trend we see continuing through 2009. San Jose dodged the worst of the housing recession, but the 2nd half of the recession will definitely be felt.
The Sacramento area posts another weak report. Like everywhere, retail is weaker than expected, construction continues to decline, as is leisure/hospitality. This metro includes Lake Tahoe, and we should be seeing seasonal growth in hospitality. This is the number to watch for next months, December report. Sacramento also posted a big decline in professional and business services, with a significant part of the decline showing up in the higher end professional fields, rather than declines in clerical/temp type positions. If this becomes a trend, that is bad news. Of course, everyone is watching the state budget standoff. We have not seen large scale govt job losses yet, and may not see them if furloughs (temporary pay cuts) are widespread. Thus, the job losses may be limited but the income effects and agency budget cuts will have significant ripple effects through the capital region's private sector.
Still looking for good news in these reports, but haven't found any yet (unless, not being any worse than we expected counts as good news these days).
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Peripheral Canal PPIC Review: New and Improved
A revision to my review of PPIC peripheral canal economics is now posted.
It includes water recycling costs, new references, and a few edits and comments in response to the PPICs rebuttal.
In Delta news, the judges continue to cut water exports.
South of Delta users need to start adapting to life with reduced Delta exports now. If they do, the costs will be manageable. If they don't, we shouldn't have too much sympathy for their future problems.
It includes water recycling costs, new references, and a few edits and comments in response to the PPICs rebuttal.
In Delta news, the judges continue to cut water exports.
South of Delta users need to start adapting to life with reduced Delta exports now. If they do, the costs will be manageable. If they don't, we shouldn't have too much sympathy for their future problems.
Monday, December 15, 2008
San Joaquin County Housing Report
Our report on San Joaquin County Housing is out.
Given the current real estate turmoil, I think it is worthwhile to take a moment to look at the long-range view.
The early comments are interesting. Mostly positive, but some people think we are in the pocket of the building industry. Quite the opposite, now that I have bought in the area, I would personally benefit if building stays low for a long time. However, no building would be a bad result for non-homeowners and the overall economy (harming all of our incomes). High housing costs absorb people's income and leave less for other things (harming quality of life, and non-housing business sectors). They drive up business costs and discourage investment.
Remember, foreclosures are driven by people with mortgages they can't afford or have no incentive to pay (because they have large negative equity).
Sometimes, high foreclosure rates are said to indicate an excess supply of unwanted housing. However (dusting off econ 101 here), excess supply is defined at a given price. At a median price of $440,000, SJ County has more houses than people want to buy. As we are seeing now, when prices drop, people want those homes and the market clears.
Given the current real estate turmoil, I think it is worthwhile to take a moment to look at the long-range view.
The early comments are interesting. Mostly positive, but some people think we are in the pocket of the building industry. Quite the opposite, now that I have bought in the area, I would personally benefit if building stays low for a long time. However, no building would be a bad result for non-homeowners and the overall economy (harming all of our incomes). High housing costs absorb people's income and leave less for other things (harming quality of life, and non-housing business sectors). They drive up business costs and discourage investment.
Remember, foreclosures are driven by people with mortgages they can't afford or have no incentive to pay (because they have large negative equity).
Sometimes, high foreclosure rates are said to indicate an excess supply of unwanted housing. However (dusting off econ 101 here), excess supply is defined at a given price. At a median price of $440,000, SJ County has more houses than people want to buy. As we are seeing now, when prices drop, people want those homes and the market clears.
Friday, December 12, 2008
Cost of California Greenhouse Gas Plan
Sacramento Bee story
The analysis of costs has been rightly questioned by many after seeing a unanimously critical peer review from a very solid group of economists. See UCLA professor Matt Kahn's blog for a good discussion, and a link to the actual economist reviews for real econonerds.
It is interesting to me to compare this to the water (peripheral canal) issue. In the peripheral canal case, the economic costs of cutting Delta exports are being overstated, and the environmental benefits are right in our backyard. In the air case, the state seems to be more willing to undertake the costs (which are being understated), when the environmental benefits are more global (meaning shared with people outside the state).
It will be interesting to follow the details of AB32s implementation. In the long-run, it might be incorporated into a national climate-change cap and trade plan. If this is the case, there could be some real advantages to California being an "early mover" in this direction.
(Personal tangent: Prof. Kahn and I were both econ majors at little Hamilton College years ago. I worked with another reviewer, Dallas Burtraw of RFF, on a similar project in Maryland in the recent past and he is top notch. I have been critical of some of Gary Yohe's power industry funded sea-level rise research in the past, but he is still a solid reviewer here.)
The analysis of costs has been rightly questioned by many after seeing a unanimously critical peer review from a very solid group of economists. See UCLA professor Matt Kahn's blog for a good discussion, and a link to the actual economist reviews for real econonerds.
It is interesting to me to compare this to the water (peripheral canal) issue. In the peripheral canal case, the economic costs of cutting Delta exports are being overstated, and the environmental benefits are right in our backyard. In the air case, the state seems to be more willing to undertake the costs (which are being understated), when the environmental benefits are more global (meaning shared with people outside the state).
It will be interesting to follow the details of AB32s implementation. In the long-run, it might be incorporated into a national climate-change cap and trade plan. If this is the case, there could be some real advantages to California being an "early mover" in this direction.
(Personal tangent: Prof. Kahn and I were both econ majors at little Hamilton College years ago. I worked with another reviewer, Dallas Burtraw of RFF, on a similar project in Maryland in the recent past and he is top notch. I have been critical of some of Gary Yohe's power industry funded sea-level rise research in the past, but he is still a solid reviewer here.)
Thursday, December 11, 2008
UCLA says ...
According to the just released UCLA Anderson forecast, the state's unemployment rate will peak at 8.7% at the end of next year.
Our forecast says it will peak at 9.6%.
For the sake of thousands of workers, I hope they are right and we are wrong. We will check back a year from now and see.
Our forecast says it will peak at 9.6%.
For the sake of thousands of workers, I hope they are right and we are wrong. We will check back a year from now and see.
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Streamlined Mortgage Modifications = Welfare?
Streamlined Mortgage Modifications = Welfare says University of Chicago economist.
I agree with this. I should also state that I agree with a government loan modification plan - but it should focus on reducing principal and eliminating foreclosures - not reducing monthly payments which only delays foreclosure.
Both the Treasury and FDIC plans have the common flaw that they are focused on setting loan payments as a % of income - regardless of the value of the underlying asset and the principal value of the loan.
For example, two people both paid $500,000 for an identical house with an identical loan in 2005. Suppose the house is now worth $250,000 and they are both deeply underwater, and have a strong incentive to default - regardless of their income. If they are offerred different government backed mortgage modifications based on their current income, then it can be argued that the mortgage plan is a hidden welfare program or tax.
If the policy goal is to stop preventable foreclosures, both homeowners should be offerred the same deal - a new $250,000 mortgage at a fixed market rate with any gain from a future sale shared between the homeowner, the lender who forgives the principal, and taxpayers who insure the new loan. The % of income should only be used to determine if they qualify for this new loan, and afford their house at current market prices. If they can't, foreclosure should proceed.
See previous posts for more, here and here.
I agree with this. I should also state that I agree with a government loan modification plan - but it should focus on reducing principal and eliminating foreclosures - not reducing monthly payments which only delays foreclosure.
Both the Treasury and FDIC plans have the common flaw that they are focused on setting loan payments as a % of income - regardless of the value of the underlying asset and the principal value of the loan.
For example, two people both paid $500,000 for an identical house with an identical loan in 2005. Suppose the house is now worth $250,000 and they are both deeply underwater, and have a strong incentive to default - regardless of their income. If they are offerred different government backed mortgage modifications based on their current income, then it can be argued that the mortgage plan is a hidden welfare program or tax.
If the policy goal is to stop preventable foreclosures, both homeowners should be offerred the same deal - a new $250,000 mortgage at a fixed market rate with any gain from a future sale shared between the homeowner, the lender who forgives the principal, and taxpayers who insure the new loan. The % of income should only be used to determine if they qualify for this new loan, and afford their house at current market prices. If they can't, foreclosure should proceed.
See previous posts for more, here and here.
More than housing
Diamond Foods is a good example of how Stockton's growth over the past decade was deeper than just a housing boom. Today's Sacramento Bee has a story that describes how Diamond Foods is adding more value to locally grown nuts today than they were a decade ago.
See our economic impact of agriculture report for more on the importance of value-added food processing in San Joaquin County.
See our economic impact of agriculture report for more on the importance of value-added food processing in San Joaquin County.
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Treasury floats another bad idea
January 20 can't come soon enough for the Treasury department.
This new proposal is great for Realtors and homebuilders, as you only get the low rates for new purchases. To get a 4.5% mortgage, my neighbor and I will have to buy each other's houses and move next door, since we can't get this rate by refinancing and staying put. Not surprisingly, this proposal is heavily backed by the Realtors.
It is also a homebuying subsidy that will be politically very hard to take away once it is in place.
The real impact of this proposal will be to put a chill on home sales for a few weeks while buyers wait to see if they can cash in on this new goodie. Like the original TARP, Paulson will eventually change his mind and avoid doing the wrong thing in the long-run. Yet another flip-flop that produces uncertainty and undermines trust in the Treasury. I look forward to a Treasury secretary that gets things right the first time.
Please give us a foreclosure prevention plan that encourages principal write-downs for owner-occupants who can qualify for a mortgage at their homes' current market value. That will stabilize the housing market and protect neighborhoods, but it won't generate Realtor commisions.
This new proposal is great for Realtors and homebuilders, as you only get the low rates for new purchases. To get a 4.5% mortgage, my neighbor and I will have to buy each other's houses and move next door, since we can't get this rate by refinancing and staying put. Not surprisingly, this proposal is heavily backed by the Realtors.
It is also a homebuying subsidy that will be politically very hard to take away once it is in place.
The real impact of this proposal will be to put a chill on home sales for a few weeks while buyers wait to see if they can cash in on this new goodie. Like the original TARP, Paulson will eventually change his mind and avoid doing the wrong thing in the long-run. Yet another flip-flop that produces uncertainty and undermines trust in the Treasury. I look forward to a Treasury secretary that gets things right the first time.
Please give us a foreclosure prevention plan that encourages principal write-downs for owner-occupants who can qualify for a mortgage at their homes' current market value. That will stabilize the housing market and protect neighborhoods, but it won't generate Realtor commisions.
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Weston Ranch gets a "mini" Wal-mart
At least they finally have some shopping in Weston Ranch.
Thank goodness they didn't build that Wal-Mart 101,000 square feet. It would be terrible if people had more selection of products in the store, more room in the aisles, or a few more cash registers to shorten check-out lines.
When it comes to big-box bans, it seems that the real issues that concern folks have nothing to do with the size of the store. It is better for policy to address those issues directly (whether they are aesthetic, labor, environmental, etc.). This also exposes whether proponents motives are protection from competition rather than protecting citizens from harm.
Thank goodness they didn't build that Wal-Mart 101,000 square feet. It would be terrible if people had more selection of products in the store, more room in the aisles, or a few more cash registers to shorten check-out lines.
When it comes to big-box bans, it seems that the real issues that concern folks have nothing to do with the size of the store. It is better for policy to address those issues directly (whether they are aesthetic, labor, environmental, etc.). This also exposes whether proponents motives are protection from competition rather than protecting citizens from harm.
Monday, December 1, 2008
Revising the bet
So far, I have had no takers from the PPIC team on my offer of a $10,000 bet.
Maybe, I'll have better luck if I bet on water recycling costs instead of desalination. The PPIC report assumes reclaimed (recycled) water in 2050 will cost $1480 acre foot (in 2008$).
Like desalination, I offer to bet them $10,000 that water recycling costs will reach 1/2 their assumed value ($740), before California's population reaches 46 million.
I guess I shouldn't expect them to accept it, since I would immediately win. A new Orange County facility has been recycling wastewater into drinking water for $550 per acre foot for the past year.
Maybe the PPIC peripheral canal team will take it if it is 1/3 their assumed costs. Perhaps I should offer to give my winnings back to them if they fix their study and reestimate the models under better assumptions.
[The point is that this inflated cost assumption also inflates the PPIC's estimated cost of eliminating Delta exports by several hundred million dollars. It isn't included in my earlier review, but will be part of the update coming in a few weeks.]
Maybe, I'll have better luck if I bet on water recycling costs instead of desalination. The PPIC report assumes reclaimed (recycled) water in 2050 will cost $1480 acre foot (in 2008$).
Like desalination, I offer to bet them $10,000 that water recycling costs will reach 1/2 their assumed value ($740), before California's population reaches 46 million.
I guess I shouldn't expect them to accept it, since I would immediately win. A new Orange County facility has been recycling wastewater into drinking water for $550 per acre foot for the past year.
Maybe the PPIC peripheral canal team will take it if it is 1/3 their assumed costs. Perhaps I should offer to give my winnings back to them if they fix their study and reestimate the models under better assumptions.
[The point is that this inflated cost assumption also inflates the PPIC's estimated cost of eliminating Delta exports by several hundred million dollars. It isn't included in my earlier review, but will be part of the update coming in a few weeks.]
Peripheral Canal - Aguanomics endorsement
David Zetland's aguanomics blog is excellent. This morning he changed his mind on the peripheral canal.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Sierra Club = misdirected energy
I'm not sure about the Sierra club's ventures into urban planning.
There are more serious environmental issues for this region where the Sierra Club could be a natural leader (lets start with endangered species and salmon runs), yet it seems focused on where Spanos builds apartments as its top cause.
More on San Joaquin County homebuilding in the coming weeks.
There are more serious environmental issues for this region where the Sierra Club could be a natural leader (lets start with endangered species and salmon runs), yet it seems focused on where Spanos builds apartments as its top cause.
More on San Joaquin County homebuilding in the coming weeks.
Friday, November 21, 2008
Unemployment Friday
The dismal news from the EDD is here.
San Joaquin County data is heading the wrong way fast. Stockton has been amazingly resilient through the housing collapse, with strong growth in Ag-related sectors and a vibrant wholesale, transportation, warehousing sector holding up the local employment picture. However, these two sectors are going to be hit hard by the U.S. consumer recession and global downturn. This months data shows those sectors declining and it will likely accelerate. After being one of the last metros to lose jobs on a year over year basis, Stockton is now down 1.2% year-year.
The Sacramento area has had a dismal 6 months in employment. This month wasn't as bad, as there was real strength in education at all levels (private, public, higher ed and K-12), even more than the typical fall surge. Retail continues to be weak, and there will be less than the usual holiday surge next month.
The East Bay (Alameda, Contra Costa) continue to be the biggest job losers in the region, down 2.1%, over 22,000 jobs in the past 12 months. This is bad news for commuters from San Joaquin, Stanislaus and Solano counties.
San Francisco and San Jose continue to be the top performers in the state. They are still slightly positive on jobs year-year, but may turn negative in next months report. The financial market crisis and stock market crash will be felt in these high income areas.
San Joaquin County data is heading the wrong way fast. Stockton has been amazingly resilient through the housing collapse, with strong growth in Ag-related sectors and a vibrant wholesale, transportation, warehousing sector holding up the local employment picture. However, these two sectors are going to be hit hard by the U.S. consumer recession and global downturn. This months data shows those sectors declining and it will likely accelerate. After being one of the last metros to lose jobs on a year over year basis, Stockton is now down 1.2% year-year.
The Sacramento area has had a dismal 6 months in employment. This month wasn't as bad, as there was real strength in education at all levels (private, public, higher ed and K-12), even more than the typical fall surge. Retail continues to be weak, and there will be less than the usual holiday surge next month.
The East Bay (Alameda, Contra Costa) continue to be the biggest job losers in the region, down 2.1%, over 22,000 jobs in the past 12 months. This is bad news for commuters from San Joaquin, Stanislaus and Solano counties.
San Francisco and San Jose continue to be the top performers in the state. They are still slightly positive on jobs year-year, but may turn negative in next months report. The financial market crisis and stock market crash will be felt in these high income areas.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Water Summit Notes
Some thoughts from listening to the panels at the San Joaquin Business Council Water Summit
1. A good case was made for Regional Self-sufficiency, most notably by Tom Zuckerman. See this plan.
2. Dino Cortopassi was the only person I heard raise the point that higher water prices could be part of the solution. It is the proven best way to encourage conservation and reduce waste, and needs to be a bigger part of the conversation.
3. Two weeks after the election, and I saw my first political ad of the 2010 Governor's race. Lieutenant Governor John Garamendi brought a video bio to introduce himself. His speech was actually ok, but I'm tired of political ads.
4. I picked up a nice Restore the Delta bumpersticker.
5. Kern County Supervisor Ray Watson made an interesting comment to the effect of "We have oil, you have water" in the context of regions working together. I couldn't help but wonder about the reaction in Bakersfield to the proposed oil severance tax. I'm not surprised that they don't think it's fair. However, it seems it is ok to take water from the Delta as long as the export users pay the cost for conveyance. If we pay for a pipeline to Bakersfield, does the Delta get a right to the oil?
1. A good case was made for Regional Self-sufficiency, most notably by Tom Zuckerman. See this plan.
2. Dino Cortopassi was the only person I heard raise the point that higher water prices could be part of the solution. It is the proven best way to encourage conservation and reduce waste, and needs to be a bigger part of the conversation.
3. Two weeks after the election, and I saw my first political ad of the 2010 Governor's race. Lieutenant Governor John Garamendi brought a video bio to introduce himself. His speech was actually ok, but I'm tired of political ads.
4. I picked up a nice Restore the Delta bumpersticker.
5. Kern County Supervisor Ray Watson made an interesting comment to the effect of "We have oil, you have water" in the context of regions working together. I couldn't help but wonder about the reaction in Bakersfield to the proposed oil severance tax. I'm not surprised that they don't think it's fair. However, it seems it is ok to take water from the Delta as long as the export users pay the cost for conveyance. If we pay for a pipeline to Bakersfield, does the Delta get a right to the oil?
Monday, November 17, 2008
State Budget Proposals
There are a lot of tough choices on the table. Long-term solutions should be preferred whenever possible. I expect a new federal stimulus plan for Washington will provide some short-term money.
Taxes and Fee Increase Proposals (not a full list, in order from best to worst):
Expand Sales Tax to Services: A good long-term policy. I would go further than the Governor's proposal and add even more items such as movie tickets. Helps local governments too.
Alcohol Tax: Proposed increase is modest and good policy.
Oil Severance Tax: Yes.
Community College Tuition Increases: Yes. These fees are incredibly low in CA compared to other states. I would go beyond the LAO proposal and double and triple these fees, which will still leave them at half the level (or less) of other states.
Temporary Increase in Sales Tax Rate: No. A temporary solution, and the rate is already too high.
Temporary Income Tax Surcharge: No (although less bad than the temporary sales tax).
Cut State Holidays: Yes, this is a reasonable concession to ask of state employees.
Furlough Days for State Employees: A temporary budget solution that is tough on morale and has long-term impacts on performance. If the state payroll must be trimmed, I would prefer to strategically cut the state workforce but this is slower to implement than furloughs.
Increase vehicle fees: No. I prefer to increase the marginal costs of operating a vehicle (gas tax, toll roads) than the fixed costs of owning one (registration fees). Severin Borenstein has an interesting proposal in the today's Sacramento Bee.
Taxes and Fee Increase Proposals (not a full list, in order from best to worst):
Expand Sales Tax to Services: A good long-term policy. I would go further than the Governor's proposal and add even more items such as movie tickets. Helps local governments too.
Alcohol Tax: Proposed increase is modest and good policy.
Oil Severance Tax: Yes.
Community College Tuition Increases: Yes. These fees are incredibly low in CA compared to other states. I would go beyond the LAO proposal and double and triple these fees, which will still leave them at half the level (or less) of other states.
Temporary Increase in Sales Tax Rate: No. A temporary solution, and the rate is already too high.
Temporary Income Tax Surcharge: No (although less bad than the temporary sales tax).
Cut State Holidays: Yes, this is a reasonable concession to ask of state employees.
Furlough Days for State Employees: A temporary budget solution that is tough on morale and has long-term impacts on performance. If the state payroll must be trimmed, I would prefer to strategically cut the state workforce but this is slower to implement than furloughs.
Increase vehicle fees: No. I prefer to increase the marginal costs of operating a vehicle (gas tax, toll roads) than the fixed costs of owning one (registration fees). Severin Borenstein has an interesting proposal in the today's Sacramento Bee.
Friday, November 14, 2008
FDIC Foreclosure Plan
The FDIC releases their plan today.
Marginally better than the FHFA plan released earlier this week (described below) in that it reaches more problem loans and provides some carrots and sticks for lenders to participate.
However, it still doesn't focus on principal reduction. "Principal forbearance" is different in that you are still required to pay the entire original loan balance in full if you sell or refinance. This is going to result in lots of short sale issues down the road, and still leaves too many families with an incentive to default.
I think principal forgiveness with shared appreciation mechanisms can be much more effective. The % by which future appreciation is shared with the lender who helped you out can be a function of the amount of principal forgiven. Before embarking on yet another plan, why not modify the plan passed this summer.
Marginally better than the FHFA plan released earlier this week (described below) in that it reaches more problem loans and provides some carrots and sticks for lenders to participate.
However, it still doesn't focus on principal reduction. "Principal forbearance" is different in that you are still required to pay the entire original loan balance in full if you sell or refinance. This is going to result in lots of short sale issues down the road, and still leaves too many families with an incentive to default.
I think principal forgiveness with shared appreciation mechanisms can be much more effective. The % by which future appreciation is shared with the lender who helped you out can be a function of the amount of principal forgiven. Before embarking on yet another plan, why not modify the plan passed this summer.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Foreclosure Prevention Plans
We have been waiting for weeks to hear the new plan for preventing foreclosures, and we get this?
If you don't have a plan that is actually going to help, do us a favor and don't bother with a news conference. Among it's many problems...
1. Only applies to Fannie and Freddie loans. (Doesn't apply to most subprime loans.)
2. You have to be 3 months behind to qualify. (Great incentive to default.)
3. No principal reduction, and the payment is set to a % of your income. (Doesn't change your upside down mortgage status, thereby not eliminating the root cause of long-term default.)
A real loan modification program is very important for the Valley.
The Frank-Dodd FHA refinancing bill passed this summer isn't getting much business since it started October 1. This is the one that would put people in a new fixed rate FHA loan at 90% of homes value if the lender agreed to accept 85% of the home's current appraised value to pay off the original mortgage. It's funny to think this was criticized as an overly generous taxpayer bailout this summer. Things have certainly changed. Why would anyone be interested in this program now, when the bailout plans are getting more generous by the day. I still think this original plan had the basics right, and would prefer to see it modified to be more attractive to borrowers and lenders - inevitably increasing the risk of loss for taxpayers.
Rather than refinance the loan at 85-90% of current home value as in the original plan, why not set the refinance loan at 95-100% of current home value. Rather than have future appreciation shared with the government (if house is sold at a profit in the future), have this future appreciation shared with the lender who wrote down the principal. Of course, the borrowers would still need the income to qualify for their new fixed mortgage and it would only be available to owner occupants.
This greatly increases the incentives for lenders to participate. It is a better deal for most homeowners than mailing the lender their keys. For any loan modification program, dealing with the securitization of mortgages (multiple owners) and 2nd mortgages continues to be one of the toughest issues.
See these links for better explanations of shared appreciation mortgages (SAM)
Brookings Institution and see Rescuing Main Street in this essay
If you don't have a plan that is actually going to help, do us a favor and don't bother with a news conference. Among it's many problems...
1. Only applies to Fannie and Freddie loans. (Doesn't apply to most subprime loans.)
2. You have to be 3 months behind to qualify. (Great incentive to default.)
3. No principal reduction, and the payment is set to a % of your income. (Doesn't change your upside down mortgage status, thereby not eliminating the root cause of long-term default.)
A real loan modification program is very important for the Valley.
The Frank-Dodd FHA refinancing bill passed this summer isn't getting much business since it started October 1. This is the one that would put people in a new fixed rate FHA loan at 90% of homes value if the lender agreed to accept 85% of the home's current appraised value to pay off the original mortgage. It's funny to think this was criticized as an overly generous taxpayer bailout this summer. Things have certainly changed. Why would anyone be interested in this program now, when the bailout plans are getting more generous by the day. I still think this original plan had the basics right, and would prefer to see it modified to be more attractive to borrowers and lenders - inevitably increasing the risk of loss for taxpayers.
Rather than refinance the loan at 85-90% of current home value as in the original plan, why not set the refinance loan at 95-100% of current home value. Rather than have future appreciation shared with the government (if house is sold at a profit in the future), have this future appreciation shared with the lender who wrote down the principal. Of course, the borrowers would still need the income to qualify for their new fixed mortgage and it would only be available to owner occupants.
This greatly increases the incentives for lenders to participate. It is a better deal for most homeowners than mailing the lender their keys. For any loan modification program, dealing with the securitization of mortgages (multiple owners) and 2nd mortgages continues to be one of the toughest issues.
See these links for better explanations of shared appreciation mortgages (SAM)
Brookings Institution and see Rescuing Main Street in this essay
A Bet
I offer to bet the authors of the canal PPIC report $10,000 that desalination costs will drop below $1000 per acre foot before the state’s population reaches 46 million. Following the style of the PPIC report, I propose that both the amount of the bet and desalination costs be adjusted by changes in the Engineering News Records’ price index.
If they stand behind their report, they would be foolish not to accept.
The PPIC results hinge on the following 2 assumptions about the world in 2050.
1. California’s population will be 65 million.
2. Desalination costs will be $2072 per acre foot (in constant 2008 dollars)
As explained here and here, I think these assumptions are both way too high and drive their result endorsing a peripheral canal. They make some other bad assumptions too, but these are the worst.
I think a much more likely scenario is:
1. California’s population will be 55 million.
2. Desalination costs will be $1000 per acre foot or lower.
There is a lot of space between these two scenarios. If the PPIC team really believes their assumptions, they should be very willing to bet against my predictions. Since there is a pretty good chance that none of us will still be alive in 2050, some adjustment is necessary for this to be any fun. To make it to 65 million in 2050, the California population would need to get to about 46 million by 2020. Note that this really skews things in their favor, since I should only have a dozen years for this desalination technological advance to occur. If the PPIC team believes in their research, my offer should look like a sure thing to them, and they should be eager to accept.
This proposed wager is inspired by the famous Simon-Ehrlich bet.
December 1 update: I have posted an alternative bet here.
If they stand behind their report, they would be foolish not to accept.
The PPIC results hinge on the following 2 assumptions about the world in 2050.
1. California’s population will be 65 million.
2. Desalination costs will be $2072 per acre foot (in constant 2008 dollars)
As explained here and here, I think these assumptions are both way too high and drive their result endorsing a peripheral canal. They make some other bad assumptions too, but these are the worst.
I think a much more likely scenario is:
1. California’s population will be 55 million.
2. Desalination costs will be $1000 per acre foot or lower.
There is a lot of space between these two scenarios. If the PPIC team really believes their assumptions, they should be very willing to bet against my predictions. Since there is a pretty good chance that none of us will still be alive in 2050, some adjustment is necessary for this to be any fun. To make it to 65 million in 2050, the California population would need to get to about 46 million by 2020. Note that this really skews things in their favor, since I should only have a dozen years for this desalination technological advance to occur. If the PPIC team believes in their research, my offer should look like a sure thing to them, and they should be eager to accept.
This proposed wager is inspired by the famous Simon-Ehrlich bet.
December 1 update: I have posted an alternative bet here.
Peripheral Canal Economics
The PPIC report is the most influential economic study on the peripheral canal. This is unfortunate, because it is poorly done.
Read my assessment here. http://forecast.pacific.edu/articles/peripheral%20canal%20PPIC%20review.pdf This review assumes the reader has a working knowledge of the PPIC report.
In Short: The key assumptions underlying their cost calculations are undocumented, and greatly exceed all reputable forecasts. When it comes to future population growth, they made up a huge number, then fabricate a reference to justify it. On desalination costs, they provide no references, and when I asked the authors if they could provide some - they were unable and said the costs reflected their professional judgement. There are plenty of references on desalination costs, it's just that they are all well below their assumptions.
If it were not for these phony numbers buried in Appendix F, their entire argument supporting the peripheral canal would collapse. A study that is very impressive in many ways (approach, detailed models, some impressive researchers, nicely produced) is built on a foundation of rotten data.
Update: Even worse than the desalination cost assumption is their assumed cost of water recycling. They put this at over $1400af, when new facilities are operating at less than half this cost. Finally, I should point out that the approach of evaluating the costs for only a single, far distant year (2050) is not considered sound economics (they should evaluate the stream of costs/benefits over time), and tilts their analysis in favor of a peripheral canal.
Read my assessment here. http://forecast.pacific.edu/articles/peripheral%20canal%20PPIC%20review.pdf This review assumes the reader has a working knowledge of the PPIC report.
In Short: The key assumptions underlying their cost calculations are undocumented, and greatly exceed all reputable forecasts. When it comes to future population growth, they made up a huge number, then fabricate a reference to justify it. On desalination costs, they provide no references, and when I asked the authors if they could provide some - they were unable and said the costs reflected their professional judgement. There are plenty of references on desalination costs, it's just that they are all well below their assumptions.
If it were not for these phony numbers buried in Appendix F, their entire argument supporting the peripheral canal would collapse. A study that is very impressive in many ways (approach, detailed models, some impressive researchers, nicely produced) is built on a foundation of rotten data.
Update: Even worse than the desalination cost assumption is their assumed cost of water recycling. They put this at over $1400af, when new facilities are operating at less than half this cost. Finally, I should point out that the approach of evaluating the costs for only a single, far distant year (2050) is not considered sound economics (they should evaluate the stream of costs/benefits over time), and tilts their analysis in favor of a peripheral canal.
Saturday, November 1, 2008
Welcome to the Valley Economy
Welcome to this blog. Most of the posts will be about the economy, including many local issues in the Central Valley. Most local posts will be about the Stockton and Sacramento regions. I'm also interested in issues regarding natural resources, growth and the environment from a business and economic perspective.