McMansions Are Back And Are Bigger Than Ever

There was a small ray of hope just after the Lehman collapse that one of the most lamentable characteristics of US society – the relentless urge to build massive McMansions (funding questions aside) – was fading. Alas, as the Census Bureau confirmed this week, that normalization in the innate American desire for bigger, bigger, bigger not only did not go away but is now back with a bang.

According to just released data, both the median and average size of a new single-family home built in 2015 hit new all time highs of 2,467 and 2,687 square feet, respectively.

And while it is known that in absolute number terms the total number of new home sales is still a fraction of what it was before the crisis, the one strata of new home sales which appears to not only not have been impacted but is openly flourishing once more, are the same McMansions which cater to the New Normal uberwealthy (which incidentally are the same as the Old Normal uberwealthy, only wealthier) and which for many symbolize America’s unbridled greed for mega housing no matter the cost.

Not surprisingly, as size has increased so has price: as we reported recently, the median price for sold new single-family homes just hit record a high of $321,100.

The data broken down by region reveals something unexpected: after nearly two decades of supremacy for the Northeast in having the largest new homes, for the past couple of years the region where the largest homes are built is the South.

While historically in the past the need for bigger housing could be explained away with the increase in the size of the US household, this is no longer the case, and as we showed last week, household formation in the US has cratered. In fact, for the first time In 130 years, more young adults live with parents than with partners

…so the only logical explanation for this latest push to build ever bigger houses is a simple one: size matters.

Furthermore it turns out it is not only size that matters but amenities. As the chart below shows, virtually all newly-built houses have A/Cs, increasingly more have 3 or more car garages, 3 or more bathrooms, and for the first time, there were more 4-bedroom than 3-bedroom new houses built.

In conclusion it is clear that the desire for McMansions has not gone away, at least not among those who can afford them. For everyone else who can’t afford a mega home or any home for that matter: good luck renting Blackstone’s McApartment, whose price incidentally has soared by 8% in the past year.

For those curious for more, here is a snapshot of the typical characteristics of all 2015 new housing courtesy of the Census Bureau:

Of the 648,000 single-family homes completed in 2015:

  • 600,000 had air-conditioning.
  • 66,000 had two bedrooms or less and 282,000 had four bedrooms or more.
  • 25,000 had one and one-half bathrooms or less, whereas 246,000 homes had three or more bathrooms.
  • 122,000 had fiber cement as the principal exterior wall material.
  • 183,000 had a patio and a porch and 14,000 had a patio and a deck.
  • 137,000 had an open foyer.

The median size of a completed single-family house was 2,467 square feet.

Of the 320,000 multifamily units completed in 2015:

  • 3,000 were age-restricted.
  • 146,000 were in buildings with 50 units or more.
  • 148,000 had two or more bathrooms.
  • 35,000 had three or more bedrooms.

The median size of multifamily units built for rent was 1,057 square feet, while the median of those built for sale was 1,408 square feet.

* * *

Of the 14,000 multifamily buildings completed in 2015:

  • 7,000 had one or two floors.
  • 12,000 were constructed using wood framing.
  • 6,000 had a heat pump for the heating system.

* * *

Of the 501,000 single-family homes sold in 2015:

  • 453,000 were detached homes, 49,000 were attached homes.
  • 327,000 had a 2-car garage and 131,000 had a garage for 3 cars or more.
  • 200,000 had one story, 278,000 had two stories, and 24,000 had three stories or more.
  • 348,000 were paid for using conventional financing and 42,000 were VA-guaranteed.

The median sales price of new single-family homes sold was $296,400 in 2015, compared with the average sales price of $360,600.

The median size of a new single-family home sold was 2,520 square feet.

The type of foundation was a full or partial basement for 80% percent of the new single-family homes sold in the Midwest compared with 8% in the South.

109,000 contractor-built single-family homes were started in 2015.

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UCLA Shooter Had ‘Kill List,’ Prince’s Death an Overdose, Obama Warns Against ‘Isolationism’: P.M. Links

  • "The Sims"According to police, the man who killed a college professor and himself at University of California, Los Angeles, yesterday had a kill list that also contained the name of another person police found dead today in Minnesota. Police believe this other woman was dead before the shooter drove to UCLA, though they’re not specifically saying whether they believe the gunman killed her, too, as yet.
  • House Speaker Paul Ryan says he will vote for Donald Trump.
  • The rumors about the circumstances of Prince’s death are true: He died of an overdose of opioid painkillers. Expect more handwringing about an “epidemic.”
  • One year after the passage of the USA Freedom Act, Yahoo is now able to publicly disclose previously having been administered three National Security Letters (NSLs) from the FBI. These are the letters that demand tech companies hand over communication data (but not content) from particular users and gags the companies so that they can’t tell anybody about it.
  • President Barack Obama today told graduating members of the U.S. Air Force Academy not to be “isolationists,” by which he no doubt meant the new, dumbed-down version that confuses it with not being “interventionists.” The man responsible for permitting drone strikes that have killed children and civilians overseas did, however, warn against what happens when leaders “don’t think through the consequences of all our actions.”
  • German Chancellor Angela Merkel is begging the British citizenry to vote to remain in the European Union.
  • Gender fluidity comes to The Sims.
  • Ohio is planning to purge voters from the rolls if they haven’t cast ballots since 2008.

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter, and don’t forget to sign up for Reason’s daily updates for more content.

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Workers Don’t Need Government’s Help to Earn Higher Wages: New at Reason

WorkersOne of the assets of the American economic model is a relatively flexible labor market, especially when compared with labor markets in many European countries. It explains some of the consistently lower U.S. unemployment rates and higher economic growth. Unfortunately, this flexibility is increasingly threatened by government policies that would increase the cost of employing workers. These policies include the Department of Labor’s recent overtime rules, the call for employer-paid family leave, and a minimum wage increase.

Sometimes the support for intervention in the labor market is based on widespread beliefs that are quite wrong. Take, for example, the idea of a large “productivity-pay gap” in the marketplace—meaning that workers’ productivity rose at a high rate over the past four decades but real earnings growth failed to keep pace and instead was nearly flat.

This would be disconcerting if the data were actually accurate, writes Veronique de Rugy.

View this article.

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Just Three Things

Submitted by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Fed Stops Profits Recession

Over the last several months, I have discussed the ongoing profits recession as reported by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. To wit:

“As Jeremy Grantham once stated:

Profit margins are probably the most mean-reverting series in finance, and if profit margins do not mean-revert, then something has gone badly wrong with capitalism. If high profits do not attract competition, there is something wrong with the system, and it is not functioning properly.’

Grantham is correct. As shown, when we look at inflation-adjusted profit margins as a percentage of inflation-adjusted GDP we see a clear process of mean reverting activity over time.”

Corporate-Profits-SP500-060116

“Corporate profit margins have physical constraints. Out of each dollar of revenue created there are costs such as infrastructure, R&D, wages, etc. Currently, one of the biggest beneficiaries to expanding profit margins has been the suppression of employment and wage growth and artificially suppressed interest rates that have significantly lowered borrowing costs. Should either of the issues change in the future, the impact to profit margins will likely be significant.”

I remind you of this point because Wolf Richter brought forth a valuable piece of insight into the understanding of corporate profits are reported by the BEA.

“But there’s a detail – a huge detail – that the media conveniently forgot to point out: whose profits are included in “corporate profits.” The BEA tells us (emphasis added):

 

These organizations consist of all entities required to file federal corporate tax returns, including mutual financial institutions and cooperatives subject to federal income tax; nonprofit organizations that primarily serve business;Federal Reserve banks; and federally sponsored credit agencies.

 

Ah yes, the Federal Reserve Banks (FRB), which include the 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks, such as the New York Fed. They’re private banks, owned by the largest financial institutions in their respective districts. And as private banks, their consolidated profits are added to US financial sector profits, and thus overall corporate profits, along with those from Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, and your local bank down the street.”

Here is the problem, the profits provided by the Fed Reserve banks skew the analysis of profitability by actual operating companies. As noted by Wolf:

“For the first quarter, the Federal Reserve Banks reported a consolidated profit that had jumped 11% from a year earlier to a record $24.9 billion!

 

And this magic profit was added to the BEA’s measure of “corporate profits.” Total corporate profits ticked up $8.1 billion in the first quarter, including the Fed’s magic $24.9 billion. And without the Fed’s magic profits?”

The addition of $24.9 billion in profits from the Federal Reserve are simply recycled back to the Treasury. They do NOT circulate back into the economy boosting economic growth, higher wages or stronger consumption. More importantly, the Fed balance sheet has been skewing corporate profits to an ever increasing degree since the end of the “financial crisis.” 

US-Fed-profits-annualized-2002-2016_q1-2

Importantly, while the media cheered the slight increase in profits in Q1 as a “sign of the end of the profits recession,” had it not been for the addition of the Fed, profits would have been negative for a 3rd consecutive quarter.

“In fact, on an annualized basis, the Fed’s magic profits accounted for 27.2% of US financial sector profits and for 5.3% of total US corporate profits (blue line in the chart below), ‘the highest level in a generation.'”

US-Fed-profits-annualized-percent-of-corporate-profits-2

This is easy enough to understand, an improvement in corporate profits driven by a recycling of interest payments between the Fed and the Treasury is not a sign of a healthy economy. 

Of course, the media will continue to ignore what is happening beneath the surface until it is far too late to matter.

 

Corporate Debt Surges

But let’s stay with this idea of corporate profitability for a moment. As I discussed previously, there is a difference between profits driven by organic economic growth and artificially derived profits. To wit:

“However, not surprisingly, shortly after I published the article I received numerous emails citing low interest rates, accounting rule changes, and debt-funded buybacks all as reasons why “this time is different.”  While such could possibly be true, it is worth noting that each of these supports are both artificial and finite in nature.

 

These actions, as suggested above, are limited in nature. For a while, these devices kept ROE elevated, however, the efficacy of those actions has now been reached.”

Corporate-Profits-ROE-041416

“Importantly, profit margins and ROE are reasonably well-correlated which is what creates the perception that profit margins mean-revert. However, ROE is a better indicator of what is happening inside of corporate balance sheets more so than just profit margins. The current collapse in ROE is likely sending a much darker message about corporate health than profit margins currently.”

Since debt is a primary component of ROE, it should be noted that the collapse in ROE is representative of the increasing levels of debt to fund stock buybacks and dividend issuances. Of course, it is those debt-funded stock buybacks in particular that have continued to obfuscate the deterioration that is occurring below the surface.

Over the past 12-months, US corporations have added a massive $517 billion in new debt to their balance sheets which is the second highest level ever.

Aggregate-Net-Debt-Issuance

While companies do have extremely high levels of cash currently, as noted in the chart below, the majority of that cash is held in overseas operations and is not readily available to pay down debt levels should a problem develop. Furthermore, the net cash to debt levels has deteriorated markedly over the last two years in particular as the drive to buy back shares to boost bottom line earnings results has been the “go to” option for revenue-starved companies. 

Debt-To-Cash-Corporations-030116

According to a new report from Andrew Chang and David Tesher of S&P Global Ratings.

“At the same time, the imbalance between cash and debt outstanding we reported on last year has gotten even worse: Debt outstanding increased 50x that of cash in 2015.

 

Total debt rose by roughly $850 billion to $6.6 trillion last year, dwarfing the 1% cash growth ($17 billion).

 

Removing the top 25 cash holders from the equation paints an even more concerning picture: Total debt rose $730 billion in 2015, while cash declined by $40 billion.” 

Historically speaking, it is unlikely that with reported earnings early in the reversion process that we will see a sharp recovery in the second half of the year as currently expected by the majority of mainstream analysts. As long as the Fed remains accommodative, the deviation between fundamentals and fantasy will continue to stretch to extremes. The end result of which has never “been different this time.” 

 

The Next 10-Years Of Low Returns

A couple of years ago, I began discussing the rising probabilities of a decade, or more, of low returns which was based on commentary at that time by Research Affiliates.

In their research paper, they  discussed the impact of “secular stagnation” which would lead to lower future market returns over the next decade. How low you ask?

How about 1% kind of low?

“But Lance, the markets has returned 10% on average over the last century, so RA is probably going to be wrong.”

Before you dismiss RA’s comments, it is important to put them into some context. When low rates of return are discussed, it is not meant that each year will be low but that the return for the entire period will be low. The chart below shows 10-year rolling REAL, inflation-adjusted, returns in the markets. (Important note: Many advisors/analysts often pen that the market has never had a 10 or 20-year negative return. That is only on a nominal basis and should be disregarded as inflation must be included in the debate.)

SP500-Rolling-10year-Returns-060216

However, we can also calculate  low future returns with math:

Capital gains from markets are primarily a function of market capitalization, nominal economic growth plus the dividend yield.

(1+nominal GDP growth)*(normal market cap to GDP ratio / actual market cap to GDP ratio)^(1/10)-1+(dividend yield)

Therefore, IF we assume that real GDP could maintain 2% annualized growth in the future, with no recessions, AND IF current market cap/GDP stays flat at 1, AND IF the current dividend yield of roughly 2% remains, we get forward returns of:

(1.02)*(.8/1)^(1/10)-1+.02 = 1.7%

But there are a “whole lotta ifs” in that assumption. More importantly, if we assume that inflation remains stagnant at 2%, as the Fed hopes, this would mean a real rate of return of -0.3%. This is certainly not what investors are hoping for.

John Hussman just recently penned a similar perspective on prospective 10-12 year returns.

Hussman-ReturnExpectations-060116

Simply put, if investors view expected 10-12 year S&P 500 total returns in the 0-2% range as ‘fair,’ and believe these expected returns are acceptable compensation for a likely interim retreat in the range of 40-55% over the completion of the current market cycle, it’s reasonable to say that the S&P 500 is ‘fairly valued.’ Understand, however, that this is exactly what investors are saying when they assert that current stock prices are ‘justified’ by low interest rates.”

Just some things to think about.

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Dip-Buyers Panic Bid Stocks As Yield Curve Crashes To 9 Year Lows

Today was yet another one of those days where you just have to laugh… (warning NSFW)

 

As the Treasury yield curve collapses to its lowest since 2007 with the S&P within a couple of percent of record highs…

Simply put – Bernanke broke the 'market' in the summer of 2011.

 

Futures show the farce once again as whatever weakness was seen overnight – red arrows – (in this case a failed OPEC meeting and drop in crude) was suddenly panic bid as US equities opened (green shaded regions)…

 

On the day, an ugly open was manically bid until the European close and then again into the NYMEX close…before a late day panic buying spectacle

 

Another day, another VIX-driven surge in stocks to make sure S&P regains 2,100 (because it makes perfect sense to sell down protection ahead of tomorrow's "most important ever" payrolls print)

 

The last two days have been one non-stop short-squeeze in cash markets…

 

Bonds entirely decoupled from stocks today…

 

The US Dollar dipped and ripped today to end unch, but lower on the day…JPY strengthened for the 3rd day in a row…

 

Commodities once again were mixed… all ending the day relative unchanged despite some major swings (not how oil ramped twice to unch on the week and still fell back)

 

Crude was once again just crazy… dropping on OPEC's fail and then ripping to the API stops on the DOE 'draw' data then fading once stops were run…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Small Caps ain't cheap

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Hillary Clinton Proves Democrats No Longer Oppose Endless Wars

Submitted by Lucy Steigerwald via TheAntiMedia.org,

In America, we do not lock up our murdering politicians. We rarely prosecute or impeach them. The only scandals that stick are sex ones. Serious voters, writers, pundits, and anyone else who feels as if they have deep principles invariably buckle under the partisan weight of the political system.

She hasn’t yet been coronated, but Hillary Clinton is surely about to win the Democratic nomination. Sure, Sen. Bernie Sanders has given her an amusing amount of trouble. And though he’s voted for deaths abroad as well, he hasn’t voted for as many as Clinton. (This is not an argument for Sanders, but it is unquestionably an argument against Clinton.) Still, she’s got this thing in the bag, because she’s got party loyalty, and she may even win the hearts of a few lost, sad little neocons running away from Donald Trump.

Clinton also has the nomination because war doesn’t bother Democrats. They like to think it does, when they remember it exists, but they will risk no political capital whatsoever on making sure it stops, or making sure a warmongering candidate isn’t nominated or elected.

During the last few decades, any semblance of an antiwar movement has withered under Democratic presidents. Not since “hey/hey/LBJ/how many kids did you kill today?” has a warmonger from the left side of the isle provoked ire. Bill Clinton and Barack Obama have much blood on their hands, but not enough to push people into the streets. There are encouraging exceptions, as there are to all rules. Code Pink and other activist groups come out and protest Democrats, and don’t seem to have any plans to stop. However, it seems the anti-Iraq, antiwar movement of the early 21st century was a Dubya blip and nothing more. Part of that may be the public’s feeble attention span for atrocities far away. But it certainly appears that another aspect is that polite Democratic wars are easier to accept than grand Republican ones. Even if they both lead to the deaths of innocent people.

There’s a lot of unhappiness about the two presumed nominees for president. Clinton and Donald Trump are loathed at historical levels. There’s exciting talk about a third party candidate (perhaps the Libertarian Party’s) having a good year. But for the LP, say, a good year would be winning more than one percent of the vote. Like good little party partisans, we should accept that one (D) or (R) candidate is going to win. Unlike them, we do not have to vote for major party candidates, and we shouldn’t. But the party hacks will.

Trump is an elusive mess. Justin Raimondo has made compelling cases for Trump’s whispers of isolationism. But Trump is not libertarian, if that matter to you (it does to me). And he’s happy to say warmongering things when it fits his mood. He also repeatedly stresses his desire to build an impossibly expensive wall, deport 11 million people in an immoral, impractical act of ethnic cleansing, and he keeps saying cops are America’s most oppressed people, thereby making it seem unlikely he would be an ally in criminal justice reform.

There are a lot of real reasons to dislike or to fear Trump. Myriad ones to not vote for him. However, there is one difference between him and Hillary Clinton that has been forgotten in the Trump panic spreading through left, right, center, and libertarian circles. Trump hasn’t done anything yet. He has had no political power, and is therefore not to blame for terrible things (yet).

Clinton has done it all already. She voted for the worst foreign policy decision in recent memory, and she lamely apologized for it a few years later. Like most powerful people’s expressions of “regret” it meant nothing, and Clinton clearly learned nothing. If her time as Secretary of State is any way to judge (and it is), Clinton turns towards war whenever possible. It is never the last resort, and is quite often the first. Her pride in the Libyan invasion, which was based on the lie of a would-be genocidal Gaddafi remains. The instability, death, and terrorist empowerment that that wrought for Libya remains. Furthermore, choosing sides against (the loathsome) Bashar al-Assad helped that bloodbath continue. It is now on its sixth year. It is fueling a constant refugee crisis, and has destroyed Syria.

Any one of these foreign policy choices should be enough to knock Clinton out of the running for most powerful person in the world. But not even this cumulatively is enough, for one simple reason: Democrats don’t care about war. Now, partisanship is powerful. So much so that picking your team so the other team doesn’t win is satisfactory motivation. However, so many other issues appear to be deal breakers for Democrats. With rare, heroic exception, war is never one of those.

The leftist, apparent Sanders-supporting cartoonist Ted Rall has summed up the weakness of Democrats on this both in prose and in art. In an outstanding Counterpunch article, Rall explains why no matter the dangers of Trump and Republicans, he’s “#NeverHillary.” Troubled by Trump, Rall still makes it clear that he will not give Clinton even the whisper of support that voting entails. Why? Lots of reasons. But her war record is right there at the top. It’s enough of a reason to say no to her.

An even more pure condemnation of this attitude that Democrats, progressives, leftist, hell, anyone not a Republican, should get in line with Hillary can be found in several of Rall’s recent cartoons that mock Clinton’s nasty record. A May cartoon shows two figures: a woman is asking a man why he won’t vote for Clinton. The man responds with four panels of (purposefully melodramatic) description of the blood on Clinton’s hands, the dead of Iraq, Libya, and Syria. In the final square, the woman says “I mean, besides that.”

That’s the attitude. War is simply not on the priorities list for Democrats, especially when one of their own is in office, or is racing to win that office. Got to be practical, sensible; worry about the Supreme Court; worry about a woman’s right to choose — about the fabled misogyny of overly enthusiastic Sanders fans. Any of one of these is worth casting a ballot for Clinton over, and her own bloody, aggressive history is not enough to stop or even slow voters down. Wars happen thousands of miles away, trading them for domestic policy bliss is all too easy. You don’t like Clinton because she’s such a hawk? “Besides that” is nearly every Democrat’s true-heart answer, whether they’re willing to admit it or not. War just doesn’t matter to them.

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EQR Slashes Guidance (Again) As Luxury Real Estate Glut Looms

Back on April 27th, Chicago-based real estate investment trust Equity Residential (EQR) lowered its guidance during its Q1 earnings call, namely due to the luxury apartment slowdown in Manhattan. "New York City just turned very quickly and more deeply than we expected; There's some crazy stuff going on in New York" said COO David Santee during the call.

The company admitted on the call that due to a supply glut, it had to give an estimated $600,000 in Q1 concessions in order to secure tenants in Manhattan. CFO Mark Parrell added that weaker than expected performance in New York City properties means the high end of the company's original revenue guidance for the year was "unattainable", and EQR lowered both top and bottom line guidance that day. Full year same store revenue growth estimates went from 4.5% to 5.25%, down to a revised 4.5% to 5%, and funds from operations went from $3 to $3.20 down to $3.05 to $3.15.

Yesterday, for the second time in less than two months, EQR lowered earnings growth estimates yet again. The low end of the revised April 27th guidance of 4.5% to 5% has now become the high end of the range, as EQR now says same store revenue growth will be 4% to 4.5%.

"The revision is being driven by continued weakness in its New York portfolio and recent under performance in the company's San Francisco portfolio. New lease rates are not meeting original projections due to new rental apartment supply" the company said in a statement.

Said another way, major luxury apartment markets have cooled, and the supply glut is only going to continue to drive prices down.

According to a report by appraiser Miller Samuel Inc. and brokerage Douglas Elliman Real Estate, Manhattan property owners had to whittle an average of 2.9% from their asking rents to reach a deal, while the inventory of available listings jumped 23% to 6,718 in April.

We've covered the cooling of the luxury real estate market at length in the past, but what's notable in the new guidance from EQR is that San Francisco has now joined the party – a development that clearly caught COO David Santee off guard. On the Q1 call, Santee proclaimed that outside of New York, all was well.

"Other than New York, demand is very robust" Santee said on the call… oops.

Perhaps David Santee should read more Zero Hedge, as we have been pointing out for a long time that the second tech bubble has burst, and that the economic ramifications are now making their way into the real estate market.

More fiction-peddling.

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Shameless Healthcare Cronyism Exposed in the State of Connecticut

Screen Shot 2016-06-02 at 12.32.58 PM

People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices. It is impossible indeed to prevent such meetings, by any law which either could be executed, or would be consistent with liberty or justice. But though the law cannot hinder people of the same trade from sometimes assembling together, it ought to do nothing to facilitate such assemblies; much less to render them necessary.

– Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations

The best way to describe Obama’s entire sleazy reign is to liken it to a Potemkin village. Everything he’s done was designed for appearances as opposed to results. Actually, that’s not really true. Everything was done to help further enrich a handful of crony insiders while appearing to be working in the public interest.

One of the best examples of this is Obamacare. Superficially, more people have coverage, which sounds great in soundbites for propaganda purposes. Unfortunately, as I pointed out in the post,  The Health Insurance Scam – “Coverage” Doesn’t Mean Affordability or Access:

continue reading

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Johns Hopkins Students Say First Semester Grades Give Them Depression, Should Be Abolished

GradesYet more students say they are triggered by one of the most basic facets of the college experience: grades. 

Johns Hopkins University is one of a handful of colleges that doesn’t include first-semester grades for freshmen on their transcripts. They receive grades, but they don’t count for anything. The custom was intended to ease students into university life, but officials are worried it encourages laziness, and have plans to abolish it. (Related: Oberlin Students Want Below-Average Grades Abolished, Midterms Replaced with Conversations) 

That isn’t sitting well with activist students, who have organized under the banner “Re-Cover Hopkins.” Not only do they want the university to return to its policy of discounting first-year grades, they want the administration to apologize for daring to change it:

“Freshmen are immediately subject to grade deflation and a cutthroat culture which has been fostered by the administration in its lack of urgency to implement a remedy. Hopkins students experience anxiety, depression, and suicide at high rates which cannot continue to be tolerated for the sake of competitive academic performance. 

Students from low-income backgrounds, first generation students, students struggling with mental health, students with disabilities, international students, and sexual assault survivors—as well as students whose experiences exist at intersections of marginalized race, gender, and sexuality—are disproportionately affected by the policy change.” 

Erica Taicz, a student and Re-Cover Hopkins organizer, told The Baltimore Sun: 

“I’ve heard a lot of feedback from parents and the administration that kind of makes it feel like we are just trying to be coddled, and it’s not it at all,” Taicz said. “I’m paying so much, I expect to be able to be critical of that service when it doesn’t support me. 

“I’m paying to have a support network, academically and mentally. I can’t be expected to do well in class if I’m depressed and have anxiety. If the school is worsening my anxiety, that’s their problem and they need to be held accountable for that.” 

Taicz is right that she’s paying an obscene amount of money to attend Johns Hopkins. Tuition there is $50,000 a year, and that’s not even including room and board. But if students like Taicz are really just looking for a network of comprehensive mental support, there are certainly cheaper counselling services out there. 

What Hopkins students are actually paying for is a rigorous education and, eventually, a degree that demonstrates their intellectual competence in some area of study. Making college easier by discounting grades will ultimately cheapen the value of that degree. 

It’s okay, of course, for the university to make specific accommodations for struggling students who have legitimate issues. But activist students seem to be borrowing the language of trauma to describe mundane discomforts. 

In reference to the new grading policy, National Review‘s Katherine Timpf writes, “Having to receive letter grades is not a traumatic experience, it’s a normal one, and any potential students who think they can’t handle it should really just go somewhere else.” 

That’s obviously a bit harsh. Some students experience real difficulties, and deserve sympathy. Indeed, the overwhelming cost of attending college—and the debt it implies—no doubt provokes legitimate anxiety. But in some sense, higher education must be foremost about learning and evaluation. It’s just how school works.

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Uber Just Got a Bunch of Saudi Money. That’s Good News for Women Everywhere.

uberUber just received an investment of $3.5 billion from Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund. A bunch of headlines have cropped up claiming this is bad news for women—an understandable, but utterly backward analysis. 

At Forbes, Contributor Rebecca Lindland writes

My very first thought upon hearing the news was, “This is just another reason/excuse/barrier to not let women drive.”

But she immediately undercuts her own argument:

Not that the Kingdom needs another reason or excuse—it’s an absolute monarchy after all.

And she’s right. Tyrants gonna tyrannize. The debate over whether Saudi women should be be allowed to obtain drivers licenses is utterly medieval and sophistical. It has almost no contact with the reality of protecting women’s safety, promoting female virtue, or anything else that is actually happening in 2016. There’s a tweet going around that suggests Austin (which recently banned Uber) is now “reactionary” and Saudi Arabia is “progressive.” The Austin Uber ban is backward, but there’s no universe in which Saudi Arabia is less reactionary than the hipster home of Texas weirdness. 

What’s more: Uber is already operating in the Kingdom—80 percent of its current customers there are female, for obvious reasons—and there’s no cause to think that this investment will do much to change that fact. (The money does come with a seat on Uber’s board for Yasir Al Rumayyan, managing director of the fund and a Saudi bigwig, which muddies the water slightly. But that fact is likely to have little impact on the broader debate about letting women get behind the wheel.) More Saudi money to Uber isn’t the same thing as more Ubers in Saudi. The Uber money is just another investment by an entity that already has holdings in many, many American companies, not to mention U.S. treasuries.

And Uber CEO Travis Kalanick—not famous for his diplomatic skills—is rather spectacularly unsuited to move the needle on the debate about women’s right to travel in the famously closed country. Instead, he can do what entrepreneurs do best when faced with a big stupid chunk of deadweight loss created by government intransigence: he can try to find a way to meet pent-up demand that the jerks in power didn’t have the imagination to ban in advance. 

While some people were hollering about privatizing the post office, communication got freer and cheaper thanks to phone, fax, FedEx, email, and SMS. The same thing is happening in a more modest way with Uber in U.S. cities, where inefficient and occasionally discriminatory taxi cartels are falling apart thanks to competitive pressure. Those innovations didn’t happen entirely outside of the sphere of government influence, but for the most part the technology simply outpaced the rulemakers, to the benefit of nearly everyone.

It would be better if women were legally allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia. Obviously. Obviously! Obviously. Sheesh.

But if Kalanick (and Saudi state investors) think they can make money by providing more, better, cheaper ways for humans to move about more freely in any country, but especially in a country where it’s quite difficult for women to travel, that’s a net gain. Period.

Asking Uber to reject the investment is a classic example of making the perfect the enemy of the good. Poor women will still be worse off than rich women. Women will still be worse off than men. Assaults, harassment, and rudeness will still occur inside and outside the confines of automobiles, public and private. But a well-funded fast-growing Uber will lessen those problems globally (and in Saudi Arabia), not exacerbate them. 

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