The housing bubble, or whatever you call it was caused by low interest rates obviously. People buying houses for 500k when really they should be looking at houses in the 300k market. Low interest rates is all about if you can afford the payments, and hey, if you can get more now then before, then people jump on it, and i dont blame them. Now houses were still being built, and commerical properties, etc.. before the lowered intrest rates. The interest rates did spur alot of housing, and i mean a big fist full, but it was still inevitable because of people coming to age, it was about what was affordable. The problem is people wanting to live in suburbs, or so called "rural areas". People will buy a house that was developed on wetland woods, and then complain when the farmer next to them makes dust, noise, or a smell to the township. Then when the farmer sells it because money is more easier then aggrevation, they complain they want it stopped by any possible way to "preserve land". Now im not a city person, but we have empty cities, and major towns since 1950 from previous populations. Take Detroit, they lost over 50% population after 1950 and i dont think they gained the 50% back as of yet. People say hey, the city is dirty, and has irrational crime rates, and thats true. Now if the states and the cities formed an alliance on stopping sprawl, redevelopment of the cities, would bring back cash for an unreasonable large size police force to stop any crime. Now i say redevelopment, as not housing, as everything as a whole. It makes more sense for a business, in manufacturing, assembly, or raw material creation to be in a city, because of transportation logistics. This lowers costs, and provides jobs, but in NJ you can see these same businesses being out in the suburbs, or leaving to anywhere in the US. Its a tricky thing, but jobs should really be in cities or large towns, not two miles deep in some rural town, where employees are not local, and drive 40 miles to work. Im not about making demands on business locations, im about providing to the business to make a good choice on location, this can turn the suburbs back to the outlands, and preserve land just by the economic reasons. I doubt the suburban houses would lose value, they would become high income places, a two bedroom would be considered alot to someone distance travelling to work just to live in suburbia.
Take Camden i have heard story after story of Camden, from the 50's and before, how it was a real nice, safe place. Now lets be honest, the Delaware river is a major import port. Why not say, lets screw Pennsylvania, and expand the port to Camden, and make it tax free from any State import taxes? Also why not recruit large business into Camden, from incentives as having no tax payable from them to NJ for 20-30 years. This would drive in business, and farm business to produce, and export from Camden. This would not cost NJ anything, because people in Camden have a stupidly high unemployment rate, and also the black hole in crime in the nation. Tax revenue would come from the people there, and people flooding there to work. Conditions on the businesses would be of people living in Camden, or 10 miles of Camden to make up say, 60% of the work force, otherwise tax giveaways revoked. NJ could be a diamond, its a corridor, with two possible major ports, after the establisment of them in expansion, the future tax revenues on them could solve any fiscal problems, and force the people of New Jersey to wish to cap services to people who havent lived here in the past 20 years because of greed. I personally see New Jersey as an economic goldmine from its location, but nothing is encouraged to the benefit of New Jersey, just the benefit of votes, or for politicians to get part time jobs for $150k a year, when the jobs are in titles only, so they just vote for the special interest group. I could go on and on about how New Jersey could be insane in the amount of money it brings in, if it just made rational choices about things, but i dont want to waste any more readers time here anymore.