2004 - Gruen Gruen + Associates
Transcription
2004 - Gruen Gruen + Associates
THE INSTITUTIONAL REAL ESTATE LETTER was, Do people with different pnor travel propensities select themselves into residential neighborhoods that supportthosepropensities,or doesthe A study of the impact of residential New Urban-styleneighborhood cause land-use configurations on travel th6se who live within it to walk and behaviorreminded me of the current take transit rather than drive? As they controYersy about kissing in the wrote in their article, the resultsof their Moscow Metro stations. In the June research suggest "when attitudinal, 2002 issue of The Annalr of R4ional lifestyle, and sociodemographic Science,Michzel Bagley and Patricia variables are accounted for, Mokhurian summarizedtheir research neighborhoodtype has litde influence in five San Francisco Bay Area on travel behavior." neighborhoods.The five were selected "to representa rangeof valueson key Theseresultsshouldnot be ta.kenasan characteristics of land-use type, argument against new urban inciuding pubiic transit accessibility, developmentsand certainlynot agzlnst land use mix, residentialdensity and relatively high-density developments employment mix." Including z variety around tansit per se. But the study socioeconomic,travel doestendto confirm the beliefthat real of demogra.phic, and attitudinal lifestyle data, the estate is more likely to respond to researchersbuilt a stn:ctural equations cultural and socialattitudes that convey model that included the feedback behavioral tendencies than to act as a relationships betvreen the land-use determinant of behavior. ClearlS there c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s o f r e s i d e n t i a l is some feedback between the built neighborhoods and the types of environment and the behavior of people, but the attitudes that shape residentsin those neighborhoods. behaviorareinfluencedby much more The purpose of their researchwas to than real estate. testt}repropositionthat higher-density mixed-use traditional, neo-traditional, Which brings me to the current urban or new urban neighborhoods controversyaboutkissingdrinkingand induce fewer vehicletrips and shorter spitting in the museum-like, beautiful trips tian what is likely to be generated stationsoFtle Moscow subway,which by typical low-density suburban transpotts 9 million passengerson more tian 4,000crowded trains dailp enqfonments. Sincethe fall of the Sovietpolice state, Advocates of New Urbanism have the freedom granted to the system's argued that the relatively high-density passengershas led to behavior that urban neighborhoods with few some Muscovites think is unciyil. accommodations to the auto will Sunday night is reported to be enhancesustainabilityby encouraging notorious for station drinking parties, walkingand transit use at the expense frghting and kissing. Concerning of the automobile. Their advice has kissing one Muscovite told The Tinet beenheededby many public agencies, (London), "The young kiss on the including the U.S. Environmental Metro to shock. It is exhibitionism. Protecdon Agency, which allows air Kissing hello is one thing but quality improvement credits for straddling a man is another. There are developmentsthat Frtthe New Urban other placesto makelove." mold. Valera and Natasha Cherkashin,two installation and conceptual Moscow Mokhtarian and Bagley The question sought to answerwith their research artistswho stageda weddingbetweena Kiss and Ride Can Real Estate Alter Behavior? January, 2004 PASC1 scantily clad beauty and one of the statues in a Metro station, arguedthat the proposedlaw againstsuchbehavior won't work. "The only v/ay to stop young people kissingis to shoot them. These laws are made by people who never loved," they told TheTinet. Whatever the outcome of the current debate in Moscow, the lack of safety and what most people considercivility certainly affects travel behavior in away that is more important than neighborhood configuration or even the aestheticsof the buiit environment Looking a litde closerto home, recendy a teenagertragically was shot to death while riding on a San Franciscobus. And my sons,who useBay Area Rapid Transit frequendy,havewamed mywife not to ride the systemalone at nighg when they consider some of the stationsto be dangerous.If always-on cameras, rapid-response police protection and rules that discourage panhandling and loud muslc were employed to make tansit riding safe and civil, I believe the result would, over time, exceed the effect of any changesin developmentpatterns * Dr. Claude Gruen is e Principal with Gruen Gruen f Associates, a research and consulting frrm with offices in San Francisco and the Midwestwww.ggassoc.com TIIE INSTITTIIIONAL REAL ESTATE I,ETTER Born to Shop . . . Elsewhere February,2004 By Nina Gruen Dear DepartrnentStore ChairExecutive: Shopping pattems today are driven by demographicsand an economytJratare very diFferent from the consumer milieuand economicenvironmentthat give birth to departrnent stores and made them profitable for over 100 years. This trend will be even more pronounced in the future. In light ot this very changedset of businessand ciilf,-iial citcumstances, condnuing businessas usual can only lead to stagnantsales,shdnkingpro6S and, in time, death. What should you do? Future retailing successstories will cometo thosemerchantswho canbest servethe massand luxury markets. IF I vzeredevelop a shopping mall in 2004, it would be anchored by a Neiman Marcus and Targeg a Saksand Kohls, or a Nordstrom and Wal-Mart In our increasinglybi-modal society,a high percentageof thosein the middle income categoryare shoppingat WalMarg Target, Kohls and RossDress for Less rather than at Macy's, Dillard's and Robinson's.The wisdom of the strategyof going for these tenants and the specialtystoresthat attract upperincomeshoppersis confirrnedby 2003 holidaysales. In terms of same store sales, luxury stores did the besg while moderatepriced specialtystores did far better than mid-line departrnentstores,with the exceptionofJ.C. Penney.Neiman Marcusled the packwitl a 14.8percent increasein same store szles,followed by Nordstrom (9.1percent),Costco (8 percent),and Saks(5.1 percent).WalMarg J.C Penney,Target and Ross all experienced4.0 to 4.3 percent sarne store sa.les increases. At the other end of the sDectrum ale Federated Deparrnent Stores (1.2:percent) and SearsRoebuck(0.8 pecent). pase2 electronics and services,with the latter including a tattoo parlor, yoga sp4 and eateriesappealingto the Ys palette. Let's saythat you agreethat your chain hzs to shift to a strategrthat can attract The key to re-inventing your chain to the two potentiallyprofrtablebulgesof attract these trendy buyers cannot be consumerdollarson both ends of the found in the hands of financial wizards income distribution. F{ow do you or managementmavens. To createthe implement that strateg5r? magnets that will pull in luxury dollars and the trendy young you need to First, weed out your weakest sales attfact and, motivate entreoreneurial locations and consider converting at merchants.When merchandis'lnggenrus leastsome of thesestoresto housing. Rose Marie Bravo took over the At somelocations,retailspacecould be Burberry chain,I knew the future would maintained for first-floor srreer not be a repeat of the past. I v/asnot frontage use. Many converted stores surprised to see her chaage the would make ideal assisted-living perception of Burberry from a store facilides becauseof their central or that cateredto middle-agedtrad.itional near-to-shopping locations. Other customers seeking raincoats to a obsolete departrnentstores could be purveyorof stylishclothing forwomen, adaptedto houseyoungdr,non-family men, childrenand yes,evendogs. workerswho frnd urbanlocationscool. To sum up, your future doesnot need For store locations where sales are to be businessor lack of business as good but not greag consider the usual.But itwill require a radical change London Selfridge merchandising in departrnent store concept and approach. Turn the store into a truly management. Because retailing as a exciting set of specialties.At one sector employs more people than extreme,thesespecialties canservethe manufacturingthis is not only an issue luxury market strong accessories for you, your stockholders and the includingthe$1000to $5000watch,the consumingpublic, but for the economy right-hand diamond ring for the aswell. In the United States,16percent independentrroman, and other bling- of all employment in 2000, or about bling stylesthat cater to the trendy, one out of everysix workers,wasin the higherincome buyer. retailing sector.We all have a stakein your following tl-risunasked-foradvice. Rememberthat much of today'swealth and income are in the hands of the Cordially, baby boomers.There arb 85.3 million boomers betweenthe agesof 37 and Nina T.Gruen * 56. Combine this demographicreality with the largenumber of women who are in their high eaming years, and luxury demandwill staystrongunlessa recessionlastslong enoughto become a depression. At the other end of the specm;mis tl-re youth market Generation Y is the Nina ]. Grueu is a Principal with largestsingledemographicage group, Gruen Gruen * Associates, a research witil 88.7million youngpboplebetween and consulting firm with oflices in the agesof 7 and 26. Imagine a store San Francisco end the Midwest with only the coolest clothes, www.ggassoc.com THE INSTITUTIONAL REAL ESTATE LETTER History Repeats Itself: Maliing the Economy Work for Middle America March, 2004 even the richestdid in the early1800's. PASC1 competition.Needlesslydriving up *re costof living increasesthe costoflocal labor per unit produced. The paceand scaleof recentinventions and conceptualizations in electronics, communication and organic science,along 5. SubsidizeU.S. agriculture so that it anificially. drives dorvn wodd food During the early 1800's,state, local and with cost saving improvements in prices at rhe expenseof farrnersin bansportation, have increasedproductivity federal dollars v/ere spent on dams, Iocls usher in a new developingcountries. to once again enough the markets of to expand and canals few phase. there are a economic Ofcourse, laying the farrners and manufacturers, foundation for an economic boom that differences.This time, the labor force D o : expanded urban America and is middle competingforAmerica'sentrenchedjobs is Focus on education. class.But not everyonebenefitedfrom dris not limited to the importation of brawn; both brawn and brain jobs are being nnovauon. Invest in the infrastructure neededto exported to India, Chh4 Russia and serve expanded and more affluent The open:ngofdre canalsleadto a decline elsewhere. population and businesssectcjrs. h employment opportunities for tearnsters and the industry that supported them. Secondly, the U.S. economy should be Workers arrdi:ovestorsli '.hisscctor had to adjusteC so that it can benefit others 3 . Recraft the tzx lav/s to encounge innovation, on-the-job training and lnd odrermeznsof eaminga livelihood or besides the CEOs of multi-national job-enhancementprograms by U.S. a pauciry jo:n the ranksof the unemployed.But the corporations.Recenrdararevea.ls domiciled companies, while is suspicion in the growth of and rhere cost cuts and new markets fac itated by 1obs, eliminating ta-rbenefits that encourage cheaper trzrsPortation increased the the number of low-wage workers being firms to domicile outside the United demandfor a broadenedoutput of goods, pa.rdby householdsandbushesses"offthe States. w h i c h b r o u g h t i o b a n d i n c o m e books" has increased.Jobs and rncome opporunities to those who could master opportunitiesneedto be expandedto raise the techniques and endure working in living standardsand grant more Amelcan /1 Require transparency in financial dealings while simultaneously manufacturing, distribution, retail and householdsthe eamingkeysto the middle reforming our own legal system and class. production. agncultural those of our global parmers,so laws are usedto protect human and property is how to adjust the Following advice on The cycle of market extensions, rights, not to raise *re prices through it can productivity enhancementand sector-by- American economy so that lawsuits that specify exaggerated sectoradjustrnentrepeateditself when the accomplishthesegoals. punitive claims. rariroadskickedoffanother maior upward shift in the American economy. As the Don't: Stickwith and wrn the war on terrolism loc}s became inoperative and the canals to safeguard democracy and market1. Put up tariffs and other uade barriers siltedup, the canalboarnan lost work. If " r e v e r s e driven economieseverywhere.. jobs i n a n a t t e m p t t o railroad track, they laying they sought job growth is in globalization." Most found themselves competing with low the servicesector,so our chancesof wageworkers brought in from overseas,as -;/ell as uhesteampile drivers tlat hested killing globalizationare much lower than the likelihood of crippling the Henry. John incentivesfor continuing productivity increases. Despite some tough times, the economtc expansionspurredby the steamengine,the Squander resources on expenslYe, railroads and a spate of industrial image-building margina.l actrvities, product inventionsled to price cuts and suchas explorationof Mars. improvements.As a result,the majority of Americanscameto enjoybetterhealthand previouslyunimaginableluxuries,including 3 . Encourage the rmmigration of lowskilled "guest workers." We need to indoorplumb:ng store-boughtclothes,and hcrease the sk ls of the U.S. work a vasdy expanded array of food, force and keep the pressure on all Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal with and educational and culn:ral entertainment, in productivityinvest of sectors to Gruen Grueu + Associates, a research expansion offelngs. In trme, the and techniques. enhancingequipment and consulting firm with offices in indusuy, distributron, finance, medicine San Francisco and the Midwest. and ocherservicesmade possibleby the www.ggassoc.com productivity and transportation gainsof the 4. Drive up the cost of living through restrictions on development and post-Ciyil War decades enabled most resource exEaction thar consuain Americansto live better and longer than THE INSTITUTIONAL REAL ESTATE I.ETTER PASC2 Pittsburgh and shoe and leather businesses in St. Louis found themselvesadvantagedby the specialty supplies,labor base,shipping facilities and other logisticalsupportsthat were readilyand relativelycheaplyavailable. More recently, the build up of university-based research and pioneeringtechnology firms clustered within the Palo Alto, Califomi4 area provided agglomerationeconomiesto what Peter Drucker has termed the "knowledgeindustnes." If interest rates are kept low, the upcoming wave of new innovations' increasing business investments' continuing strong consumer demand and gtowing exports will continue to keep the GDP growing a.lbeitat a somewhatslowerratethan at the endof 2003.But globalcompetitionForiobs and ouput will remaintough. Regions with stronghigh-tech'gglomerationsin high-cost and congestedareaswili see relativelygood output growth but weak job gtovth. The natural resourcesthat facilitated grovth in the manufactudng era includedproximity to the materidsthat were extractedor grown. Nearbywater or rail transport hubs facilitated the import oFraw materialand the export in new a ushering factors Among the finished goods.Todaythe perdnent dayfor regronaleconomicdevelopment of are the intensification of global natural resourcesinclude the climate competitionemphasizingcost control, and recreationalamenities that help increasing outsourcing of jobs, the attract and keep highly skilled and waves of electronic and biological creativeworkers. innovations, the ability of firms to managefar-flungoperationsand, most Robert Putnam's 7997 book, Making importangcongestionandhighhousing DemocraglX/ork,has led us to include costsin some regions.To predict the the concept of socialcapitalas a third winnersin the fight for output and jobs ingredient necessary for regional growth, we must review the three economicdevelopment.A May 2001 concepts that drive regional report from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and development. ofNaion:: Development, The lVell-being C@ital, Hunan and Social Regionaleconomicgrowth caanottake The fuh oJ off without the presence of natura.l defrned social capital as "networks resourceand agglomerationeconomies togetherwrth sharednorms,valuesand appropriateto the technologicalbaseor understandings that faci Iitate development stage o[ the times. cooperationwithin or amonggroups." Agglomerationeconomies refer to a Socialcapitalrefers to the commonly spatiallyconcentratedcapitalbasethag held attitudesthat shapethe openness from increasingretums to scale,gives of individualsand firms to new ideas cost and revenue advantages to a and ways oF doing business,and the regon's expanding and new firms' willingness of the body politic to encouragethe changesneededto offset Theseadvanugesare "e4temal to tle firm," because they benefit all the the physicaland socialcongestionthat, companiesengagedin a given rangeof with growth, become bariers to the acunties within a parucular place, expansion of agqlomerationbenefits without firms having to shellout extra and continued access to natural In the globalenvironment, advantages. resources, Iack of social capital will discourage V/hen manufacturingwas the industry further job growth in the short run and most attuned to the contemPorary eventua.llydecreasethe rate at which economic technology, steel plants in output cangrow. Lower-cost regions that can create or knowledgeindustry agglomeradons, that already ha're such agglornerations along with the natural and built excitementsthat canattractthe creative young and hold them, will grow in ouput and jobs. Good caadidates include the Phoenixregion and regions such as Las Vegas, with a strong entertainment agglomerationand the social capital to facilitate growth in an expanding artzy of activities.Regions based on historic manufacturing agglomerations or non-innovative service activities are likely. to see a continued decline in both jobs and oubut. + Where Will the Economy Grow? Basic Concepts Still APPIY in Assessing Regional D eveloPment April,2004 My graduateschoolstatisticsprofessor taught that "usually, past data is the best basis for predicting the future." When predicting where economic output (GDP) and jobs will grow, however,his advicedoesn'tapply.Since the U.S.GDP startedgrowing againin November 1991, some regions have experiencedoutput gro$rthwhile their employrnent bases declined. Other regions have seen output and job growth, rvhile slll other areashavehad declinesin output and iobs. Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal with Gruen Gruen * Associates, a research and consulting firm with officesin San Francisco and the Midwest. www.ggassoc.com THE INSTITU:UONAI REAL ESTATE I.ETTER PASC1 how much the United Stetescould reduce In the United States, farming is treated its present agricultural capacity and still differendy ftom all other industries, not have the potential for self-sufficiency, but only in terms of supports but by erperiences during Wo d War II suggest dis couraging innovation. University of Wisconsin-Madison researchersRodolfo a significant reduction would be safe. Mznuelli and Ananth Seshadri found the Driving past farms and ranchesgives me the farm lobby also argues v/e must dming of improvements in the design of maintain farming as a way of life ot as a tractors and their use on American farms a pleasantfeeling of mythic nostalga. It does that to city folks all over the unioue sub-culture.A revie.pofthe costs could be erplained by following the path of real farm wages. During the develq>edwodd, regardlessif they sprang of pieserving farms and farming sugests that even ifyou feel farm preservationis Depressiorl when farm wageswere loq from farm families. This motivates us to accept polemics in support of public worth the price, we are going about it farmers did not have the incentive to badly. Woddwide, the annual direct costs switch from horses to tractors. Only in policies that preserre farms and putative agricultural lands. This emotional feeling of farm subsidiesare estimatedat about the 1940's, srhen farm wages rose, were also causesus to shrug off the taxes we $235 billion. The Organization for tractors widely adopted. pay for thesepolicies and to minimize the Economic Co-Operation estirnatesa fullindirect costs of maintaining the rural time farmer in the Eurooean Union Yet rather than supporling improvernents receives$17,000per year in cashor price in the desigr of harvestingmachines,the farmscaoe. U.S. govemment is trying to help farmers supports, while the average full-time cut costs by encouraging the immigrauon Although the acreage planted in Americaa farmer gets about $16,000. of workers. I agree with agricultural artichokes has decreased by half, for economists such as Phillip Martjn at recipients largess get up ofthis example,I pay less for superior-quality Not a1lthe artichokes now than I did 40 years ago. eady in the moming to tend to the co\zs University of Califomia, Davis, who The prices of most other crops also have or fields. In August 2002, rhe San believes introducing machines will enable '60s, and the quality of Franci.tto Chmniclc rcported discount farms to compete arrd also a1lorr them to dropped sincethe produce available year-round in the broker ChadesSchwabput his1600-acre increase the pay of the workers they do developedwodd has improved because rice farm up for salebecausehe no longer need. have had time to go duck hunting on the increases in productivity property. The article noted the S4rether we use our excessfarm land for dramatically increasedyields. Environmental Working Group estimated needed housing and urban development The content-ionthat we have to maintain the Schwab family collected more that or as public open space, a tztional the present supply of farmland or fzce z $730,000in subsidiesfor the farm over a reduction in the costs of agricultural preservation would pay large benefits to five-yearperiod. vsoddwide food shortage is flat out taxpayers, workers and the health of our wrong. We are in an upside-down production at in Ma.lthusianwodd with incteases the Farm subsidiesencourage urban places.* food supply outpacing increases in Ievels above what the wodd can buy at arrything close to the actual costs of population. This relatiorxhip is not likely production. The wodd price of food has to change in the future, as population growth is ptedicted to stop long before dropped to the point where small farmers in developing nadons carrrot compete. technologic al and capital improvements ceaseto increasewhat can be grown ot For many of these countries,the type of farming that could succeed-- if they did raisedper acre. not have to compete with the subsidizing Many of those who atgr-refor subsidies, nations -- offers their best path out of price supports and farmland protection poverty. A Mttdn 276 New York Tinet xecogoizethat even while famine stalks article discussedthe economicmalaiseof many poor lands, the cause of this farmers in rura.l Polarrd, Slovaki4 tragedyis not a shortage of food in the Hungary and the Baltics. The article 'that after Poland enters the developedwodd. They recognize, too, sugeste4 that creating more surpluses in the rich EuropeanUnion May 1, some small-scale farmers may be bought out by \vealthy countries is neithei a temporary nor Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal with perrnanent solution'to the problems of investors from Denmark, Finland and the Gruen Gruen * Associates, e research developingnations.One argumentheard Nethedands, who will consolidate the and consulting firm with offices in from those vrho understand this is that farms and apply For and receive the San Francisco and the Midwesr each nation or region needs to be self subsidiesfrom the European Uruon. www.ggessoc.com sufficient.I haveyet to seean analysisof Trends May,2004 Expensive Nosalgia: The High Cost of Farm P reservation THE INSTITUTIONAL REAI ESTATE LETTER Trends June,2004 In Defense of Dumb Growth: Dissecting Studies on the Impacts of Suburban Sprawl Ever since "Tbe Cost: of SPraul" was published rn 1974, people have been trying to scientificalln or at least the negative accurately, quantifr economic impacts of urban gro$th on the suburbs. The studywas initially hailed as a breaktluough proof of the economrc damagedone by suburban development. But subsequent analysis of its basic assumptions lead to the conclusion the study proved litde excq>t that higherdensity development chewed up less land than lower-density development. Most of us would stipulate to this even in the absenceofa study. Furd:ermore, I think many ofus would agreelarge lot zoning and other land use regulations that &ive down the per-square-foot cost of lald and encourage high density are neither nor equitable economically environmentallysensible. But generalizations continue to be made about the economic benefits of reducing incentives for all but very higfr density development and redirecting growth away from the suburbs. T'hese include urban limit lines and measures aimed at directing z gteltet share of regional growth to central cities and the older places near them. In recent years, particulady Iimitations on gro.*th, along with suburban growth, requirementsfor mixed-usedevelopment and design features that make development appeai rnore urban, have been given the heroic tjde of "smart gro.*th." In'olhe Activities and Benefits of Smart Growth" (Spring 2002 lVhartun Rul ErtateRrriee), k)tgers Professors Robert Burchell and David Listokin, Brookings Institution Seniorl Fellow Anthony ^ Downs, and Catherine Gallen Rutgers, at associate postdoctoral estimated that limiting development to such "smart growth" would save "govemment, developers' homebuyers, and citizens$250 billion over the next 25 years, or $10,000 a dwelling unit." The article explained this estimate vzas developed from "the pooled results of findings from studies conducted in New Jersen Mclugan, South Carol.in4 Florida and the Delaware Estuarf." When I read this, I had two reactions. First, I thought that if America's homebuyers were given the choice, they would gladly pay $10,000more per unit to have what they preferred. That reaction, of course,is a value judgement which I cannot back up with survey data. But my second reaction, that I believe the estimates to be wron& is based on the experienceof conducting more than 100 fiscal impact studies for projects and municipal programs over the last 30 years. Before writing this column, I wrote 6rst to Downs and subsequendy to Burchell and l-,rstokirL asking them to explain the sources and methodology by which they obtained the estimates stated in *reir art-icle. Downs wrote back that Burchell did the numbers. Burchell did not repln nor did Listokin. V&y don't I believe generalizations about the high costs of suburban grouzth?Firsg when I cal decipher how the numbers were derived it is usually &e casethat a sigrifi cantproportion ofthe "savings" are based on the assumption that suburban growth, or even infill growth, induces the need for roads, sewers and other infrasftucture forwhich it doesnotpay.If that is trLle, then all it shows is the jurisdictions vrithin which the nevr developmenttakesplaceareunderpricing tJreir impact fees. Cetainly this need not be the case, and it is not in manY jurisdictions tiat use nexus studies to calculatethe cost of capitalimprovements needed if the new growth is not to lower existingstandardsfor loca.ltransportation, sewage, flood control water and other urban infrastructure.In some cases,new development pays for its share of newly induced demand for public services,and also is forced to pay for improvement of existing conditions. Second, data on public employees per PASC2 household does not substantiate the belief that the price of public employees is higher in suburban communities than in central cities. Salaries, pensrons, equipmeot and supplies make up the bulk of any municipaLity's costs. Finally, and this is ken decreasing the amount of land that builders can buy will increase land rents and land prices.As economistshave shown, the resultingincreases in what can and vrill be charged by those who are allowed to develqr and re-develop their laads ryill more than wipe out any savings in capital or other costs. Stopprg suburban growth is not smarq rather it interferes with the cycle of outward grornh that over t.ime will cycle back to re-grow the central cities. of Furthermore, as University Permsylvania Professor of Urbarusm 'aneasuring Witold Rybcznski v/rote in Sprawl" (Spring 2002lYbartonBealEwa Bcuiew),commwnities such asI-os Angeles and Phoenix, often cited as being examples of sprawl, actually have higher population densities than older metro areas such as Chicago and Boston. Rybcznski surmises fast growdr, rather than sprawl, may be the red target of people's concerns.To that I would only add that attempts to stq> suburban residentialgrowth at reasonabledensities, say eight units to the acre or more, is not smart. Nor is attempting to justify it wids unsupportable allegationsof cost savings. * Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal with Gruen Gruen * Associates, a research and consulting firm with offices in San Francisco end the Midwest www.ggassoc.com THE INSTITUTIONAL REAL ESTATE LETTER Trends Living Museums: How Special Interest Groups Prevent the Evolution of U.S. Cities July, 2004 The socialcapitalof a city or region - its attitudesand socio/polit-rcalorganization is one of the most important influences on d:re area's economic development, The processthat allocatesresourcesto the built environment and how and where places will be built is one of socialcapital'smost important roles. In tum, how well the built environment serves the members of the community and how well it adjusts to economic and social imperatives affect the growth of the econornic resource base. This has always been true; what has changedover time is who has the powet to allocateresources. never have been able to give birth to the ?aris of today if he had been forced to contend with such naysayers."If she v.rere alive today, shewould be astonishedto see how far the pendulum has swung in the direction of giving power to a minority of c1lzens. When renowned Dutch architect Rem Koolhasswas hired by Prada to design a new struchJre on the site of afl older lacklusterbuilding in San Francisco,antimodem activists tied to run hrm out of town. Not suqprisingly,small groups of activists find it eveneasierto stop things in Berkeley, Calif. The Mzy l0 San Francivo Chmxicb rcported a petition signed by 50 people rvas enough to prohibit removal of a tar papercoveredhouseon a weed-f led lot that had beenbought by a couple who wanted to build six new homes there. The reason given for keeping the dilapidated 'When Pharaoh Akhnaten bu t his capitol housewas that it had been built in 1878, 3,340yearsago, only he and his priests had the year Berkeleybecamea city. To date, a say in city planning and construction that city's landmarks commission has decisions.By the time King I-ouis XIV set prohibitedbuilding on 270 sites,ncluding the stage for the emergence of modem a parkrng lot that may contain American Paris, the attitudes and motivations of the Indian artifacts and a field vrhere a lonsgone 1868mansiofloncestood. businessmenwho invested their frrancial capital in private buildings had to be One getsa feel for how the power of such considered.By 1850, when Napoleon III gaveBaron George-EugeneHaussmanvast activists is embedded in contemporary pover to transform the streets, public social capital by the reverential way buildingsand utilities of Paris,hjs vision nevspapers srschx Tbe Naz York Tinn would not have been tealized without a report on their activities. In a fi:ll pageMay multitudeof subsequentbuilding decisions 96 zrticle,:d:reTinesran a picture of the two foundersof the 125-memberDefendersof by French entrepreneursand financrers. the Historic Upper East Sideand portrayed SinceColonia.ltimes,the businessclasshas as heroic their tough stance against played zn irnpocant role in the vzay projects. planning and building decisionswere made in the United States, but individuals or I arn not so naive asto believe the structure of contemporary social capital can be groups of neighbors had relatively litde altered to silenceor disenfranchisesuch By the power over urban development. . eady1960s,the acceptanceof the "citizen groups But I believe an increasingnumber participation"conceptin many U.S. cities of planning cornrnissioners and elected was begrnning to shift power to leaders zre recognizing that the entire neighborhoodgroups and a new breed of communityIosesif rhebuilt environmentis urbanactivistwho organizedaroundissues kept from changhg and growirig to meet nev/ economic and demographic and oppositionto individual proyects. circumstances.Some also are concemed was working as an about fie aesthedcstagnationthat sets in In the mid-1960s, I 'assigned to prepale a when places are treated like historic economist on a te2rn community renewalplan for SanFrancisco. museu[$, and some see the ironY of At that time, Planning Commission Chair activists fighting to preservewhat was built the Julia Porter bemoanedthe emergingpower in the years when only City Hall and in planning had much say class of smallgroupsto veto plansznd proiects, business 'Baron Haussman would Finally, the growing use by plairners and commenting, PAEC1 would-be builders of workshops and surveys with groups reptesentative of the broader civic constituency is providing inforrnation that servesas a counter to the pleas made by narrowly dehned interest groups. RecendyNina and I took part in a well publicized and attended workshop in Brentwood Califomi4 a fast growng Bay Area community. Planners from the firrn of Freedman Tung & Bottomley, who had beenhired to preparea specificplan by the City of Brentwood, used the workshop to gah insight from citizens about the design char cter that was acceptable to the community before they began to plan. As one citizen sard,'1 fecl they are trying to fmd out what features attracted us to the commr.rnity so that they can tailor the plan to preserve as much of that feel as possible." The future of our urban regions will be brighter if *re deliveryof such informadon to public decisionmakers,who are willing to consider the rnpact of a place'sparts upon the whole, tempersthe influenceof droserrrho seekto tum cities into museums. * Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal witl Gruen Gruen * Associates, a research and consulting firm with offices in San Francisco and the MidwesL www.ggassoc.com THE INSTITUTIONAI REAL ESTATE LETTER Trends A Glimpse of Russia's Future August, 2004 Russiadoes not have the degreeof democracythat exists in the United States, nor are Russian instrtunons expectedto be as transparent.But it has only been 13 years since the RussianFederationbroke free of the latest in a long string of tyrannical rulers.Although 30 million of Russia's roughly145million residentsare livrng rn poverty, the vast majority of its people have more freedom a.nd a higher standard oF living tl'ren t}ley would have thought possible when Gorbachevintroduced perestroika17 years ago; in 2003, Russia's gross domesticproduct grew by 7.30/o. Page2 prime minister. He spoke of the to privauzeits vastempireofbusinesses national commitrnent to reducing in a mannerthat gaveassetsto t-hevell povertyand improvinglivingstandards. placedwith the chutzpahto grab them. He descnbed his governmends There is no doubt the Russianlegal approachto threekeyareas:healthcare, system is primitive. But as Ron education and vrelfare. It plans to Chemow demonstratesin his current increasethe effrciencyof the hea.lth b est seller,AlexanderH amilnL it to ok 30 program with a hybrid system that or so years and a tough fght by providesa minimum of care to a.llbut Federalists like Hamilton and John permitsthosewho canafford it to buy Marshall to createthe foundation of a superiormedicalservices. Officialswant better legalsystemin the UnitedStates. to improve the ability of their already excellenteducationsystemto provide The glimpseof Russiathat I took away trainingthatwill equipgraduatesfor the with me suggests today'sRussianleaders workplace. understardt-hatmarketsystemsrequire a systemoF laws that prorecrprivate Currendy, the social welfare system properry, a workable tax system tiat providesmany free servicesthat are a permitsgovemmentto provide needed hangoverftom Sovietdays.Theserange infrastructure,and a dependableand from free bus rides and free food to reasonablytranspafentbarking system. surqivorsof tie siegeof Leningradto Becausetoday'sKremlin Ieaderspnze food and service vouchers for wat economic growth the way tleir vetera.ns. Zhukov sardthe govemment predecessors prized military power,the warts to allow t-hosewho truly need future will seegradualevolution toward thesebenefitsto continueto receive a much more just legal system and them as subsidies,but to eliminatethe something much closer to what those free goods and servicesto those who countrieswith al Anglo Saxonttadition can now afford to purchasethem. considerto be democracy.* During my first trip to Moscow and St. Petersburgin 1990, the people were drably dressed, gim-faced and sometimes hungry. This year, the throngs on the streets were well dressed,well fed and smiling.Russians expect to be better off in the future than they ^re todzy,and this is clearly the intentof theirgovemment. As I listenedto Zhukov discussthe way he wants to handle non-needy Russia's march toward a market freeloaders, I re-playedthemoviePower economyand democtacybeganonJuly Trip in my head.This docudramashows 12,1991,when the new constitutionof how the well-meaning U.S. power the RussianFederationshook off the company AES Corp. bumed through vestiges of tyrannical Soviet millions after buying the Georgian communism. OnJune12,2004,Isattn power companyTa.lasi.After a heroic the reviewingstandsin Red Squarefor effort to sell power in the Georgian a spectacular display of gymnasts, capitalof Tbilisi, AES gave up. The dancers,historicallycostumedmilitary movie drzmalizes the expensive units, and musiciansfrom 89 et-hnic inabilityof American-stylecapitaliststo groups.This celebrationreplacedthe collectfor the power they deliveredto former May Day paradewit]r a patnotrc peoplewho arelong usedto electricity but very non-militarisdcspectacle.In beinga "free" public good. his speech to the nation t\at dzy, PresrdentMadimir Put.in emphasized I don't pretend to understanda.llthe the primacy of his countr/s goal of nuances oF the ongoing trials of oil continuing to grdw gross national billionarresMikhail Khodorkovskyand Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal with product. Platon Lebdev.But I do note some of Gruen Gruen + Associates, a research th nqe critirizino thc Russian Earlierthat week,I attendeda briefing govemment for these trials are the by AlexanderZhukov, Russia'sdeputy sameexpertswho advisedthe country and consulting firm with offices in San Francisco and the Midwest. www.ggassoc.com THE INSTITUTIONAL REAL ESTATE I.ETTER Trends Russia's Housing Boom September,2004 Long lines of art lovers waited on a rainy June day to view the first exhibiton at the State Hermitage Museumby IIyaKabakov.This major culturaleventin St.Petersburgmarked the first ume Ilya had returned to Russiasincehe fled the Soqet Union in 1988.Sincethen, he has setdedin Long Island,N.Y., travelingthe world with exhibitrons t-hat have been ,,ni-afc. - h.it..J It was clear that Ilya was emotionally disorientedby today'sRussianmilieu, which is nothing like the day-to-day Iife of Soviet times portrayed in his work. His wife, Emili4 chatactenzed the gteat changethat has tahen place in the country that was once all empire. She understood Russrano longer has a communist culture, but neitheris it capitalist."Russia'sculture is a nevzmixture similarto mxing tea znd coffeein one cup," shesaid. PASC3 for gznted. calling on him to "stop rampant infill construcdonin St. ?etersburg."These Currendy, housing units are being reportersand many of their centralcity createdin much largernumbersand of readers are outraged that the vacant Fargreaterquality than what the Soviet land that many treat asfree open space, planners erroneously claimed were parking space, or the like should be being built under a seriesof "five year usedfor infill development. plans." The Russians have worked around their legal and financiai lacks To date, St. Petersbuds recendy with a host of creative prilzte and electedGovemor ValentinaMatviyenko public-private partnerships,some of has not moved to stop approvedinfill which areunder the table. projects,so the NIMBY advocatesare hoping the federal govemment will The tens of thousandsof households ovem:le municipalland-usedecisions. crowded into decrepit apartrnents In their pleas to Putn, they cite the translatedinto effective demand for slow growth arguments heard in the housingwhenlawsvestedthe rights of United States- more growth would be theseoccupantsto their units. Russia's environmentally damaging, the young real estatedevelopersbuy out infrastructureis overloaded,the schools the interestsof a.llthe householdsthat arecrowded,weneedmore openspace, share the vested rights to the etc. The residents instead ryant communal apartmentsat prices that suburban development, which tl'rey permit the sellersto purchasea new arg-reis "where the grovth would be unit in the greenfreld suburbs of most beneficia]." Moscovr and St. Petersburg.Most of the newly affluent middle and upper My wife, Nin4 and I were impressed strata of Russiansociety, meanwhile, with what we saw and heard from shzrea preferencefor living in the older Mawiyenko. We suspectthat she will core of the city. need all her considerablepolitical skills to continue impror,rng the living In St. Petersburgthe new superblocks standaids of her constituents while ofhigh riseapartrnerits, adjacentto new respondingto the burgeoningRussian Finnish-owned hypermarkets and slow growth movement.* coveredmalls,^re neat World War II monuments. A young businessmznI know recendy paid $1 million for a partizJlyremodeledapartrnentin central Moscow. Prices in St. Petersburgare somewhatlower but still severaltimes what they were few yearsago. Young and middle-aged Russian urbanites have masteredthe art of gettingthingsdonein this new culture, producing economic results never approached by the old Soviet commandeconomy.Sadly,manyolder R u s si a n s f i n d themselves impoverishedand unableto copewith a ne\v systemtlat requiresa trce of entrepreneurialenerg;rnew to Russi4 with practices very diFferent from those taught at the Haryard Busrness School. As housing conditions improve in Russi4 people have reactedas in the In 1990,after my first trip to Russi4I United States,with NIMBY-ism. But did not know how the great demand becausethe middle and upper strataof for housing retarland industrialspace Russiznsprefer to live in the central would be satisfiedin a country that city, tJ-reir frght is against infill had no banking system capable or construction.In St. Petersburg,where interestedin financingreal estate,and permissionhasbeengiven to build on no legalsystemwith anydringcloseto weed-strewnlots and to replacenonthe kind of la'rs and judiciaryrequrred historic buildingsthat cannot feasibly Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal with to guide and enforce contracts or be renovated,more than 50 editorsand Gruen Gruen + Associates, a research and consulting firm with offices iu provide the type of legal base that journalistsfrom 30 mediaoudetshave San Francisco and the Midwest. everyU.S.nde companyofficial takes written to PresidentMadimir Prrrin THE INSTITUTIONAT REAL ESTATE LETTER Trends October, 2004 Expensive "Free Land" by the pnvate development ofhousing and commerciaispacein dre pro ject, x w e l l 2 s rn*r"r.h' "l i c f r r n d s . G r i s s o emphasizedthat he and the Agenry Feel the key to the project's feasibilityis 10.4 acres of "[ree land" donated by dre State. I began to squirm in my seat as he repeatedlyrefered to these 10.4 acres as "free land," even as he explained that the State legrslaturehad mandated a 35 nFr.Fn ^; n".-1-" .<-; -^ .. - . . *' ." Jzonlng F-.--..' r requirement as a condition for the donation. Terminal, as well as other former rr.insport.rtion-reh ted sitesowned by the Stateof California. Given the suggestion that rheprojecr's financial success hinges on the acceptaflceoF the 10.4acresfrom the PAOC1 Some rely on inclusionary zoning because they beiieve builders will no longer "overbuild" to the point w'here new housing prices stabilizeand prices Tnclusionaryzoning -- a concept firsr of exisdng units decline. I have a great ' med about 30 years ago to keep dea.lmore tarth in the economic drive suburban communities from "snob of builders than that, and as professor z o n m g ' m o d e r a t ei n c o m eh o u s i n go u r Joseph Gyourko reported in the Spring of rherr iurisdicrions -- hrs 2002 issue of the LYhaxonReal Estate metamorphosed into a tool used to Rtueu, the dera clearly shows 'except mandate the production of below for Californi4 increasedmarket demard market rate housing as a condition for produces new housing construction." approvinghousing pro jects. Suppiy increases have not yet dampened prices in places such as the A" , .,^h;.1^ .F^. _ . ..1^1i.,..i-. - _ . . . . . . . . 9 m o r e Requiring 35 percent oF the allowed Sarr Francisco Bay Atea because oF affordable housing to low- and 3,400 housing units to be affordable to entidemenrproblems and d isincentives m o d e r l t e - r n c o m eh o u s e h o l d sr,r i s r s very-low., low- rnd moderate-income such as inclusionery zonrng. etficient as shipping goods from New householdsmeansthe averageprice or \ ' . - r . - - D . . - . _ L - . _ _ _ _o - F S e n renta.l value equiva.lent of 1,156 unrts S o m e w x n r s u p p l y - d a m p e n i n g -F r r n c i s c o .I n c l u s i o n r r y z o n i n g h u r r s will be about $350,000 iessthan half reguladonsbecruserhey rvant the price middle-incomehouseholdsthrough its of what new units would sell for in this ofmarket housing to continue to go up; market distortions, and over time ofien well-located, potentia.lly prestrgious they see inclusionary zoning as an rvorks asa disincentive to the long-term n e i g h b o r h o o d . T h e r e d u c t i o n i n oFfsetlng charity to help a few lucky maintenance of the atlbrdable housrng obtainabie revenue lrom the sales of lower-income households. Bur as is it does deliver. Nevertheless, requlnng the units will be about $404 miihon, or ahvaysthe casein economics,if ir seems below market unrts be built along wrth more than $38 million per acre for the e fring cal't go on forever. it won t. housing servesmarket-feasibledemand 10.4 acres. Because the City of San Regions can push up housing prices is increasinglypopular. F r a n c i s c ou s u a l l vi m p o s e sI l 5 p e r c e n r t h r o u g h s u p p l y r e s r i c l o n s f o r . r l o n g inclusronary requiremenq one could u m e , b u r n o t F o r e v e r .E v e n t u a l i yt h e An example oi how the concept oi argr..reonly the State's add-on of 20 resultrng high cost of living will burden inclusionary zoning has become an percent should be counted - a mere the cost of labor to the pointwhere the artrcleof faith was provided at a recent $28 million per acre. Either wry, rle regtonal economy begrns to lose its meetino in Sen Frrncicr-o. The effects are a dec[ne in iand values and abiiiry to compere. For large regrons I'rncheon en h " C R E W reduced incentive for the use of land or with a lot oF existing agglomeradonc, "nnns,'red and ULI, featured a pznel briefing on older, lower-density structures for this will take a long tlme to happen. But the San Francisco Redevelopment L ^ , , ^ : . . ^ ^ - ^ 1 . . ^ ! : ^ evenrua.lly it will. and $en rne)usronrry \ o e n r v s T r " n s h i v n r n i e r. .- t T h e. P r o j e f i zoning will no ionger be an rssue as callsfor a "new neighborhoodin rhe The proposedgrossresidenuel densiry decreases in jobs and income put heartof SanFrancisco"on 39.2acres ofabout 87 unitsperacrefor the urban market demand into rerrerse at turbo rh.rr include rhe Jgrng Trarsbry core oFa major city seemsasqultelow. speed.'& The Transbayproject manager,lvlike Grisso.explerned dreproposedzoning allows3,400housingunits rn hrgh-rise towers and townhouses and the construction of a new $2.7to $4 billion bus and rarl terminal.Thc costsof the new rermind end other public inirrstructure would be borneb1 rhe t:r-'r incrementfinancingmadepossible Strte T the nrnieet .w. l a n a g e r , ""L"'-1 - . - I - . r , , . "Have you or your consultants ever analyzed rJre possibility that your redevelopmentand housingproductron goals could feasibiy be achieved srmply by rarsing the allowable density and Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal with ehminating inclusionary zoning?" After Gruen Gruen + Associates, a research some hesitation,the answerwas a clear and consulting firm with offices in San Francisco and the Midwest. www,ggassoc.coln THE INSTITUTIONAI PAqC2 REAI ESTATE LETTER Trends November, 2004 Road Blocks; Obstacles to Construction Inhibit Regional Economic Growth While 24 percent of the Ca.lifornrans housing prices have increased by 7.1 surveyedby PPIC indicatedincreased percent in the United Statesand much n should receive more in regions such x Srn Fr.ncisco surfrce trr,nsportrtio prionty tbr funding, there was no rnd Boston. where local regul:'ory a g r e e m e n t o n t h e m o d e o f ruthorities impose tough brrriers to. transportation that should be built. housing construcuon. Opening uP Mark Twarn is believed to have sard, "Everybody talks about the weather but noboiy does anything about it." Of course, with weather there is litde anyone can do. In some regtons, the sar"neseemstrue for economic growth. While most residents want economic growth, no mayority mandates the actionsneededto achieveit. Neady half supported roads in some form, such as freeways,loca.lstreets or carpool lanes, but 44 percent chose trarsit-oriented solutions, such as hght rail systems and buses Such drsparate views make rt drfficult for elected officia.lsand their statis to marshal the support needed to select the best transportatlonoptrons' In a recent survey of California residenrsby deePublic Policy Insnrute oI Californra (PPIC). when asked. "V4rat do you think is the most important issue facing the people of Californiz today?" 29 percent answered " E c o n o m y . i ob s , u n e m p l o y m e n t . " Nevertheless,when respondentswere queried about their attitudes toward e c o n o m y - s p u r r i n gr m p r o r - e m e n t si n trmspurtxtion, "rribrdeble housing, education and govemance, the survey confusion. found dissension and Without a compass of understanding to show the path to economic growth or a sharedwrllingnessto pay for the costs of the trip, even regions with good economic potentia.lwill not achieve ttre goal of heightenedeconomic growth. The prob)em oi pickrng the righr solution is made more diFficult because a significant percentage of those who express their opinion in surveys and at the voung booth often are oPlng for whet they w:nr odrers to use, rether than the transportation they wll use dremselves. In :n err rvher rhe seLectionoi ,l transportation project is often .rccomplished by comPrnng the environmental impact of ProPosed projects and modes rather than considering.r1ltransportadon opdons co st/ b en efit a uniform within framework, the lack of consensus combines wrth the drff'erencebetween actual modal choice and the modes people say they suPPort to cre2te a iormrdabie brrrrier to economic growth. ?ast generaiions provided the improved transportation facilrties that As the current controversy about led to economic growth in the United outsourcing demonstrates, wage and staned States.Many rural communides the process with roads built by local salary levels that facilitate productir,rty volunteers.Publicly financed cana.lsand are important to economic growth. The only way to stabilize or lower effective Iocks opened v/aterways that led to manufacturing and agricultural growth, wage and salary levels without and public investments in railways and sacrificrng livrng standards is to lower livrng. highway programs espanded markets r h e r e l . t t r v e c o s t o i tbr loc.rl products. Whrle these past Untbrtunately, housing and medica.l pubiic works lvere not carried Forvrard costs,two big components of the cost w i t h o u t m o l o r p o l r t r c d s r u g g J e s .t h e oi living. hete been increastngeven in argumentswere otierr limited to where t h e i ' r c e o F d e c h n i n g e c o n o m i c conditions. and how much, rather then what, to build. Since first quarter 2001, averageannual entidement opportunrtles For housing within a regron would use the hammer of competition to decreasethe cost of living. The desirability of more affordable housrng is shared by much of the p u b l i c . B u r e n o d e m e n r d e c r s i o n sr r e not made at the regiona.l ievel. Such decisions are made locally by politrcians who q'pica.liy conduci dreir heartngsin chembers packed with constih-rents from the neghborhoods that surround the proposed burlding sites.While those nerghbors may well ascribe to the principle of more aftbrdable housrng and may know more supplywill stabilize or bring down prices, they rarely wrll .rccepr more units nerr tireir own backyards. Just as binding many strips of wood rogether makes a srong beam, the blockage of many proiects by many loca.lbodies creates:t,strong barrier to economic growth. Regrons wrll be able to realize their economic potenual only if the pubhc who live and vote in those zreas come together on the Public pohcies and investments needed to ^^L.--,- +L.r ^^r-- "l Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal rvith Gruen Gruen * Associates, a research and consulting firm with offices in San Francisco and the Midwest' www.ggassoc.com THE INSTITUTIONAL REAL ESTAIE LETTER wrll work to hold down additionsto the employee base by rechargrng the productrvity garns that reduce the demendfor irbor. Unemploymentis As we look to 2005,we note the U.S. unlikelyto climb much over 6 percent, economy is sounder than the U.S. however,paruallybecausethe growth dollar. The dollar will contrnue ro in informa.lworkerswrll hold down the decline, but Asian countries, which numberof reportedjob seekers. Trends December,2004 The Economy in 2005 have long been propping up the ^,--..r,,^.r |.c .,,",...- -zil] not unload their hoard of dollars so as ro czusea monetary crlses. One reasonfor our economicstrength is the high proportion of our populatronthat works. At greaterthan 66 percent, the U.S. labor force GDP wrll grow by .rbout 3.5 percent n participatronrate is one ofthe hrghest 2005, a reasonably healthy rate of in the developed world. Not only does growth. Late in 2004,the account trade the U.S.economycontainan unusually ciet-icitwas at a historic high of 5.5 high proporuon of ihe country's p e r c e n r o i G D P . t s h . r s l o n g b e e n populationand age-elgrblework Force, t r u e .b i g e x p o r r e r sr o r h e U n i t e dS t e r e s . but a recentsurveyin the UnitedStates, such as Chin4 Japan and Singapore, Cznzda,, Jzptn,Itdn and Swedenfound have financedsome of the purchaseof U.S.workerstend to be more satisfied rhcir onnrlc h' I I q .^n<' 'mar< h' r.viththeir lobs and working conditrons purchasing U.S. Treasuries. The rhrn job holdersin the othercountries. inventory of U.S. govemment debt heldby Asiangovernmentsno$/ stands The recent tz-x law change that will at $1.1tr1lllon. enableU.S. companiesto bring back dollarsearnedoverseasat rrerylow ta-x If the Asian countriesstop trading in r.r'eswill grveonly the smallesttincrure their excessdollarsfbr U.S.assetsor, oi relie[.rnd dlrt only remporrrily.ro u n r q c v e ' ' r n l n ' d s - ' m c n F t h e U . S . the manut-acturing sector.Within that Treasurybonds they now' hold, the sector.prospecls:re good only For value of the dollar would plummet, those who can innovxte or automate. c"rusinginflrtion and higher interesr O n e o F t h e m r i o r c h r l l e n o e q n F rateshere.Economists wxtchingChinr, PresidentBush'ssecondterm wiil be to however, believe this trade gorilla is implement incentivesfor such industnal gorng to keep reinvestingin the U.S. ieadershrp. The only industnal rea.l but at a siower rate than it has in the estate likeJy to see demand growth is past.An interestingsign that tends to spacelhat can facilitate tenants' success confirmthisis the recentChineseoffer in automation or innovation. to buy the Canadranmining company, Noranda,for more than $6 billion. To achieve the potential that exists tbr Perhapsthe Chinese are broadening growth in trade, tourism and their dollar-liftrng effons by buying intemational services,the govemment assets,in addition to lending in the must reduce congestion in our seaports ,Amerlcas. and airports. To accomplish this while simultaneously increasing securitf will In 2005, the employmentbase will require faster adxptatronof biometric -^.. L,-r, --^ | -i ^-*---+ 1nd 2 and other technologres that wiil enable percent,an increaseoFat least2 million travelers and cargo to be identified and i oh s . T n c r e r s i n qh u s i n e s qi n v e s r m e n t s checkedquickly and accurately. Hr€e r.vrllspur economic growth, making up lnYestment and much more focused fbr the slov'er but slll healthy rate of attentlon must also be grven to shoring 's inr-re rcc i.n. . n e-r-c,n n. . r,1. . r-n n.q-r, -rm p l t o n up rhe coun11 overio.rdedm,rntime, I expenditures. This business investment arr and rail linkages. The real estate p"e.3 industry'sprovision of well-locatedand producuuty-facilitatinglogisacfacihtres wiil work in concertwith governmental successes in expendingthe country's capacityto move cargoover its borders and within the country. Like the premature report of lvlark Twain's death,predictionsof a housing bubble will prove ro be highly exaggerated.While housingseekersin a few regions, where the addition of supply has not been hobbled by entitlement botdenecks, will benefit From housing price stability and even s[ght decLines, most regionsmerelywill scc il sluwduwn rn thc rale nF nr;cp increases. The economy of 2005 will be neither boom nor bust, but will move aheadso : s r o i n c r e t s ei n c o m e sr n d e m p l o y m e n t ar-rdprovide strength that, ifused wiseiy, can help us deal wi$ the very real threats from terrorism and the need to move to sustainableenergy sources.* Dr. Claude Gruen is a Principal with Gruen Gruen + Associates,a research aud consulting firm with officesin San Francisco and the Midwest. www.ggassoc.com