Product Details
The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream

The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream
By John F. Wasik

List Price: $24.95
Price: $16.47 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

39 new or used available from $14.08

Average customer review:

Product Description

An incisive look at the consequences of today's costly and damaging suburban lifestyle, this new book exposes the economic, cultural, environmental, and health problems underlying life in suburbia. John Wasik provides powerful insights into how the U.S. suburban lifestyle became unsustainable and what can be done to salvage it. Wasik's observations are firmly grounded in exclusive on-the-ground research, interviews with thought leaders, and the latest studies and statistics. He exposes the untold truths about home ownership: green isn't always so green, life isn't cheaper after accounting for gas, water, and taxes, and modern suburban living isn't so idyllic considering the toll it takes on our health. Wasik's trenchant analysis adds a new dimension to an important topic, with exclusive research and analysis that debunks the many myths of suburban living, while exploring innovative solutions being developed in cities and suburbs across the country.

"Get ready for a totally original look at the American dream. Wasik delivers the first truly multidisciplinary examination--using planning, law, architecture, and history to focus on working solutions that can keep the dream alive. This is a winner!" - Paul B. Farrell, MarketWatch columnist and author

"This excellent book takes a ground-level look at the causes of our housing crisis and offers a myriad of ideas on reinventing the concepts of home and community." - Ilyce R. Glink, syndicated real estate columnist and author


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #35783 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-06-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 207 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

Review
"Veteran author John Wasik had me hooked with his brilliant writing from the very first page. Wasik weaves macro-economics, history, green technology, the environment, the American dream of home ownership and the ensuing bubble that snared so many intelligent people, into a seamless narrative so thoroughly compelling that it was a page turning joy to read. . . . Cul-de-Sac is an absolute must read for anyone who wants to know how the housing boom went awry, get a sneak peek at solutions for the future, and especially anyone considering buying their first home, or their tenth. It's one of those rare books that is so enjoyable to read that you won't be aware its teaching you more about history, science, economics, and real estate than you would ever learn in a semester long college course." --Daily Kos, June 14, 2009

"The Cul-de-sac Syndrome is an interdisciplinary study of the true cost of today's American dream. It's an unflinching look at the recent period when homeownership actually made many people poorer as they tapped their home equity, went into debt to finance their lifestyle and contributed little to retirement investing because of the misguided assumption that home appreciation would fund their future years.
This award-winning writer is one of my favorites because of the way he approaches complex topics from a range of directions. Economics, history, civics, architecture, ecology, public health each takes its turn in this investigation of sustainability. Wasik also dares to ask brutally critical questions. Is the overpowering lust for homeownership blinding Americans to becoming better world environmental citizens and improving our health? he wonders.

Wasik's meticulous research centers on the so-called spurb, his invented term for car-dependent sprawling urban areas, unconnected to core cities by public transportation and beset by unsustainable costs for infrastructure, services and resources. Think developments built far on the desert outskirts of cities such as Las Vegas and Los Angeles. The American dream of moving further from a city to buy a bigger house and find better schools has become a costly proposition, he observes. The pursuit of happiness isn't all it's cracked up to be when you have a killer commute." --Better Investing, August 2009

"Veteran author John Wasik had me hooked with his brilliant writing from the very first page. Wasik weaves macro-economics, history, green technology, the environment, the American dream of home ownership and the ensuing bubble that snared so many intelligent people, into a seamless narrative so thoroughly compelling that it was a page turning joy to read. . . . Cul-de-Sac is an absolute must read for anyone who wants to know how the housing boom went awry, get a sneak peek at solutions for the future, and especially anyone considering buying their first home, or their tenth. It's one of those rare books that is so enjoyable to read that you won't be aware its teaching you more about history, science, economics, and real estate than you would ever learn in a semester long college course." --Daily Kos, June 14, 2009 --Daily Kos, June 14, 2009

"offers an incisive look at the true consequences of this particular version of the American dream. The author is a consummate reporter and skillful writer with a keen sense of what is essential to a narrative and what is not." --Foreword Magazine, July 2009

"offers an incisive look at the true consequences of this particular version of the American dream. The author is a consummate reporter and skillful writer with a keen sense of what is essential to a narrative and what is not." --Foreword magazine, July, 2009

About the Author
John Wasik is a personal finance columnist for Bloomberg News and the author of several books. His most recent book, The Merchant of Power, was praised by Studs Terkel and well reviewed by the New York Times. Wasik has won more than fifteen awards for consumer journalism including the 2008 Lisagor Award and several from the National Press Club. He has appeared on such national media as NBC, NPR, and PBS.


Customer Reviews

Crisis: US or International, Housing or Leverage3
John Wasik offers a clear interpretation of the current crisis: American greed, especially in terms of wanting bigger houses that they they cannot afford, commuting distance from a large metropolis. This is unsustainable.

Yet there is another narrative to tell. It would begin by noting that in 2007 and 2008 combined there were a total of around 3 mln home foreclosures. The average mortgage in the US is for $210k. In average foreclosure, banks recoup 75% of the mortgage. This is worse than average, so say banks recoup 50% and lose 50%. A loss of 50% on 3 mln mortgages is $315 bln. A serious loss, but not the trillions of dollars of the losses Wasik documents.

The losses derive from another source: leverage. When Bear Stearns funds were hit at the start of the crisis, they experienced about a 5% draw down in asset value. What made it an existential issue was the 34:1 leverage they employed.

By focusing exclusively on the US, Wasik may be missing the forest for the sake of the trees. Other countries had more leveraged households and larger increase in house prices. Most other major industrialized countries in Europe as well has Japan have experienced deeper contractions than the US.

Europe and Japan had different regulatory regimes than the US. Nor did they accept the American dream that is at the center of Wasik's narrative. Yet their financial woes and economic crisis is just as severe as the US and many European banks reportedly were more leveraged than large US bnaks.

Wasik grapples with America's pursuit of property. His arguments would be more persuasive if he would have come to grips with American historians, like Frederick Jackson Turner and the American frontier thesis.

Productive property was embraced as the source of independence and freedom. A land of small property owners--yeomen--was the Jeffersonian dream. The concentration of wealth and property in the US (and other advanced capitalist countries)makes the American dream unachievable for increasing numbers. One would never know that the disparity of wealth in America has rarely been greater from Wasik, or that there was a profound decoupling of wages from productivity and inflation.

Americans may have lived beyond their means, but key moral issue may lie in how those means were determined. Increasing it has taken two incomes in a household to maintain one's socio-economic status. Wasik ulimatately seems to blame what appear to be largely victims of a political economy that shifted the national income toward profits and dividends and away from wages and salaries.

a look at the American dream - past, present, and future5
For the majority of Americans who had finally amassed enough to get their "dream house", their world has largely collapsed under them. Understanding what exactly has happened in language they can understand, author and columnist John Wasik guides us through the present housing crisis from its beginnings - how we got from "there" to our dilemmas of the present day. The future? Wasik admits he doesn't have all the answers, but his insightful research into what can be done to "re-invent", re-design the American dream, fills us with a wealth of food for thought on what our homes and our lives can be in the future. A slim book packed with good reading throughout leaves us with more understanding of what is as well as more than a glimmer of hope for our own futures. I commend John Wasik!

John is right on in his assessment of our housing mess5
Although I am one of the people John interviewed in his book, I had not seen nor did I know what he was writing about. After reading the book, I see that he is right-on in his assessment of how we got into this housing mess and where it may very well lead us. We clearly need to change the way we live our lives, with the primary goal being how we use our natural resources. If we wait until the last minute to understand how important this is and only make the changes when it is too expensive to do anything else, it will be too late. It is very easy for us to think that there will be some magical solution to the challenges we face, but after 30 years of studying the alternatives, I am less and less optimistic this will be the case. We need to hear what John is saying and try to make a difference while we can.