National Post

Sell Detroit

Halfway measures will perpetuate the city’s collapse

- Lawr ence So Lomon Lawrence Solomon is executive director of Urban Renaissanc­e Institute. LawrenceSo­lomon@nextcity.com

Detroit’s downfall is almost complete. This icon of capitalism, once the world’s greatest industrial city, has diminished to 700,000 souls, having lost 25% of its population since 2000 and 60% of its population since 1950, when it peaked at 1.8 million. detroit, whose very name was shorthand for the u.S. automobile industry that epitomized American might, is today best known for its crime and collapse, for acres of abandoned land, for art books with titles such as “The ruins of detroit.”

To avert bankruptcy, a 50-50 risk according to the city’s state-appointed emergency manger, detroit is planning to hawk its assets —– its parking garages, the Belle Isle Municipal Park, even its museum’s masterpiec­es — while cutting pensions for its present and past staff. If the emergency manager succeeds in averting bankruptcy by cutting desperate deals here and there to keep the city alive, the result will be what? A city on life support, near comatose. detroit’s agonizingl­y slow demise will continue toward an inevitable, grim conclusion. This week Standard & Poor’s and Fitch, after considerin­g the emergency manager’s 128-page rescue report, promptly lowered the city’s credit rating, in Fitch’s case to C, which translates as “imminent default.”

detroit has an estimated $17-billion in debt and pension obligation­s, an unrepayabl­e amount. rather than perpetuate the pain, detroit should simply declare bankruptcy, pay off those creditors it must and stiff unsecured creditors where necessary.

Many point to race riots, to crime, to municipal corruption and to competitio­n from Japanese car makers for detroit’s downfall and all doubtless played a role. But the mother of all causes has been union power. Had GM, Ford and the other great car makers not been straight-jacketed by union rules and union wages, detroit’s industries would not have fled to right-To-Work states and they would have retained the flexibilit­y needed to compete with foreigners. Had municipal workers not squeezed and controlled the city government, saddling its residents with poor services, crushing taxation, and corrupt politician­s, detroit homeowners would have had no reason to abandon their magnificen­t communitie­s in flight to the suburbs and beyond.

even today, if the city went bankrupt to then emerge debt-free and also with- out union contracts — whose excesses will lead the city government to run a $386-million deficit this year — detroit could easily revive to the benefit of an overwhelmi­ng number of its residents.

Step One in a post-bankruptcy, lowtax, union-free revival would see the city shuck its obligation to repay some $5.3-billion in bonds by parting with its water and sewer system, whose revenue stream now secures those bonds. Let the private sector run the municipal water works, the nation’s thirdlarge­st, as it did in detroit’s early days – the private sector will do a better job of repairing detroit’s crumbling water

Mansions once worth millions can go for $100,000. The average house sells for $7,500

infrastruc­ture while freeing the new city council of needless employees.

Step Two would be to not only sell the city’s extensive meter and other parking facilities, as it is considerin­g, but also street parking — most businesses and many homeowners would prize control over the street lane abutting their property.

Step Three involves the detroit museum, which boasts some of the world’s most famous works of art and is ranked America’s sixth best. But rather than merely selling several masterpiec­es piecemeal, detroit should sell its entire museum — complete with incomparab­le works by the likes of Matisse, van Gogh, rembrandt — lock stock and bar- rel, to the highest bidder. If the derelict city of detroit today didn’t own this museum, it would never consider establishi­ng it at the expense of the pensions of its public servants, policing, and other public needs. There is no moral case for keeping these lavish works in city hands at a mostly poor citizenry’s cost.

This sale would not only raise funds for the city, it would elevate the art world. With the museum in city hands, it has stagnated, last year drawing no more visitors than in the 1920s. In private hands — perhaps a consortium of museums would form to acquire it, perhaps the Getty Museum would add detroit as a third location — the detroit museum would be invigorate­d by new management and make itself more useful to its populace and to tourists. Should the new owners temporaril­y or permanentl­y move some masterpiec­es to a city with more eager eyes, where is the egregious harm?

The solution for detroit, in short, is to privatize everything possible and become a low-tax, business-friendly jurisdicti­on. This would end a decades-long governance that has overseen what may be, aside from war, the greatest destructio­n of wealth in human history. The now sleepy city of detroit — whose strategic location made it a thriving metropolis even before the advent of the automobile — would start motoring again as money and people poured in, particular­ly since Michigan itself just decided to become a right-to-Work state.

The real estate industry, which affects everyone, shows how low detroit has fallen, and how much it can, if given a chance, bounce back. With 90,000 vacant lots, 70,000 abandoned buildings and 30,000 empty houses, detroiters have seen their property values plummet. Mansions once worth millions can go for $100,000. The average house sells for $7,500, and even then it often stays on the market for a year or more. Prices would quickly climb tenfold should the city recover, creating a wealth effect among the citizenry, inspiring confidence, and creating a demand for goods and services. This is how to truly spread the wealth around.

Privatizin­g all of the city’s assets and making detroit a low-tax city would see almost everyone’s assets soar. Instead, almost surely, the powers that be will privatize as little as possible, and then see the city sink.

 ?? JACOB KORENBLUM / SPECIAL TO NATIONAL POST ?? Detroit has plenty of inner-city imagery and abandoned glories such as the empty Michigan
Central Station.
JACOB KORENBLUM / SPECIAL TO NATIONAL POST Detroit has plenty of inner-city imagery and abandoned glories such as the empty Michigan Central Station.

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