Sean,
Liek I told David, I agree with the same principle you do, but I think both lender and borrower are culpable not neither. They are partners to degree and when times get tough, partners ought to stick together. Lord knows I'd watch your back in Columbus! Michigan really is a mess and full of very short sighted policy makers. The majority of my opinions are based more on what friends in the industry have been sharing then my recent past experience as well.
I also agree that Detroit is a mess an sadly the funds of the rest of the state have been subsidizing its fall for the last 35 - 40 years. I think one of the major problems is the influence that Detroit has on the policies of the state. For instance, if you run for governor and win Metro Detroit, Flint, Saginaw, Bay City, you only need to caryy a couple more counties to win. Sad really.
I'm looking at what will happen when Chrysler has to close and GM is forced into BK in the next couple weeks. Remember I live on the other side of the state. Michigan currently has +12% unemployment, a little dream I'm living since December and you know how I am about working for a living. When all of these items come to bear, current estimates are that another 1.8-2.5 million jobs will be lost in the state. That will bring the Michigan unemployed levels up to somewhere between 3.3 to 3.8 million in a state of 13.5 or million people or ~25%. I have a lot of faith in the workers of Michigan, but struggle to see why anyone would invest in the state given its current tax structure and past track record for encouraging business. Getting rid of the SBT was a good start, but there is so much more to correct here. I really hope we can make it through this. I fear the first step will be electing representatives who know what the Laffer curve is and its impact on economic development.
Cheers!
JT