by arretium » Mon 16 May 2005, 15:38:01
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'S')orry guy, I gotta dissagree with you. Suburbs are here to stay. It wouldn't surprise me if 50 years from now people still commute to work 70 miles round trip. But it won't be in an SUV. Instead it will be a hybrid compact car with a 5 gallon gas tank. Basically it's "business as usual" but without the SUV.
I agree to a point. Suburbs aren't going anywhere in the near future. But the feesability of the suburbs will change when energy prices skyrocket. This in itself is the fundamental issue: how fast and when will energy prices escalate? No one here has the answer. But, even if someone drives an economy car at 30 mpg, and it takes 60 miles to get to work, that's two gallons, assuming they are driving at peak fuel efficiency, more like 3 given stop and go traffic. Times that by 2 and we get six gallons. At $5 per gallon that's $30 a day or $150 a week. The SUVers will be shelling out twice that amount of money, $300/week. The hummer drivers even more, somehwere in the $600 neighborhood per week.
What I think you're falling to account for here is the cause and effect of a significantly larger portion of a household's income directed towards sustainability. Oil and energy costs do not move apart from one another. As oil goes up, so goes other energy sources, even electricity. If we assume a household's energy bill in non oil related products increases by 50% in the same time period, millions of households we go from a positive budget to a negative. As a result, million will either be forced to downgrade their lifestyle or abandon it completely. On a macro scale, this will cause a price drop in the values of property in the suburbs relative to the other areas. Also, since families will have less disposable income, the amount of funds spent on NBA basketball tickets, MLB tickets, flat screen TVs, computers, new kitchen appliances, and even food will decline. Here's an example:
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Take a relatively well off middle class family of four with a 60 mile Commuter driving a typical SUV:
Assume two vehicles, one paid off, one used minivan to cart the kids around.
Let's start with the following:
Income: $6,167/month ($74004/yr)
Deductions (personal, child credit, and sched. A assuming $1200/month interest, $200/month property taxes, $200/month misc other): $31400
Taxable: $35302/yr
Fed Taxes: $213.75/month, $2565/yr (3.4%)
FICA: (taxable: $5558.65) $416.90/month - $5002.8/yr
Healthcare (tax free) - $300/month (most pay more)
Assume life issurance/disability - $50/month
Assume 5% 401(k) contributions, but assume tax free to simply calcuations (if portions were taxable, net income would decline, so this is best case scenario): $308.35/month
Net available: $4878
Mortgage (250K at 6.0% fixed) - $1498.88
Property Taxes: $200/month (my taxes are higher, and my property value is actually lower)
Home Insurance: $80 month
Utilities: $300 month
Net disposable: $2799.12
Car Loan - $503/month ($30,000 car, $2,000 put down, 3% interest rate, 5 years)
Car Insurance - $150/month
Auto Repair/Maintenance avgs: $100/month (relatively good running cars)
Disposable after auto fixed expenses: $2046.12
Assume food: $500/month
Household supplies: $200/month (Tide, razors, bath soap, etc, diapers)
Disposable spending at $30/week/adult: $258/month
Fuel:
Assume SUV used ONLY for commuting, no other driving:
18 mpg: 60 mile commute, some stop and go: 8 gallons per trip (I view 8 gallons as the extreme low end for this hypothetical commuter).
Price of gas: $2.30/gallon.
Fuel expenses: SUV -- $392/month
Assume other car driven little - total fuel expenes: $500/month or 217.39 gallons per month.
Summary of other costs:
Food: $500
Disposable spending: $258
Fuel: $500
Total: $1258
Net remaining cash per month: $788.12
This family is still clearing a nice some of cash per month. They can use that cash for vacations, gifts, birthday parties, New TVs, home improvements, and everything else suburbian families do.
Now lets assume fuel costs increase to $5/gal.
New Fuel expenses: $1086.95
Net remaining cash per month: $201.17
Now assume energy costs also increase 50%....
Utilitiies increase to $400 month ($100 for water/sewer/garbage).
New net remaining cash per month $101.17.
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I disagree that it will be business as usual for this well off family. This family just lost the majority of its available disposable income, dropping from $788.12/month to $101.17/month. Keep in mind we are **IGNORING** the increase in costs of foods/other household items due to increased energy prices. Nor are we considering that 40% of new mortgages these days aren't fixed. They are ARMs. As interest rates rise, the portion of their income dedicated to their mortgage payment will also increase. Nor are we considering the new "interest only" mortgages. This means even LESS money available for consumption spending for many Americans.
When you multiply this effect by millions of families in America, the net result is a radical decline in net available consumer spending, which will significantly decrease America's GDP. As America's GDP drops, the income of income-earning Americans drop. In a nutshell, this economic deliema is why so many of the people here are scared s***less about the future. And this is just when gas is $5 a gallon. When oil production declines even further, the problems compound and grow, not get better.
Also, this scenario doesn't even considering the AVERAGE family, which earns well less than $74K per year. This is the relatively well off family.
This is not business as usual. This is a serious problem.