Hurricane Sandy exposed an obvious flaw in US infrastructure.


After driving around my neighborhood on Long Island yesterday to survey the damage done by Hurricane Sandy, I’m changing my forecast. I think we will be without electricity for much longer than a week. Power lines are down everywhere. Many are supporting broken trees that are dangling dangerously over the roads. The repair crews can’t even begin to do their jobs until all the tree debris is removed. I was hoping to see an army of workers repairing the damage. Instead, they were nowhere to be seen.

 

I have some advice for our leaders in Washington. Next time you folks decide to spend $800 billion to stimulate the economy, do so on a national infrastructure program to bury all the power, phone, and cable lines. This sensible idea was conveyed to me by one of our accounts in Geneva in an email message yesterday: “[We] are baffled by the phenomenon of the US constantly losing power, whenever there is a storm. Why aren’t US power lines underground? Nobody here in Switzerland has seen a power line above ground since their childhood–they’ve all been placed underground, so they are safe from the elements. And there are no power losses in the country…no matter how heavy a snowstorm or a windstorm!”

Burying all those utility lines would certainly be a good stimulus program for the economy. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), passed by Congress in February 2009, supposedly allocated a significant portion of the $800 billion in stimulus money on “shovel-ready” construction projects. I don’t believe these included burying wires and cables. So where did all the money go?

Read more: http://blog.yardeni.com/2012/11/where-did-all-money-go.html#ixzz2B5pRlL6X




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