Has the finance industry trainjacked America?
By all accounts the Acela has been a success. Thought it is far from   perfect and constitutes moderate speed rail for the most part, it seems   to have attracted strong ridership. A midday train was totally packed on   both the BOS-NYC leg and NYC-DC leg the last time I rode it. I didn’t   see an empty seat anywhere. Which is pretty amazing given how much more   expensive it is than the regional, and frankly not that much faster.  It   does seem to have accomplished its mission of more closely linking   Boston, New York, and Washington. 
The question is, is that actually a good thing? Or has the improved   connectivity the Acela brings had unforeseen negative consequences? I   believe you can make an argument that the Acela has actually helped   birth the stranglehold the finance industry has over federal fiscal and   monetary policies, and thus has hurt America.
I don’t have time to fully develop that here, but to anyone who has   been following any of the many excellent sites tracking the financial   crisis over the last few years, it is obvious. 
There is now a near merger between Wall Street and K Street. During   the financial crisis, the government and the Fed have kept Wall Street   well supplied with bailouts and nearly free access to capital that   allows them to literally print risk free profits by recycling in the   free loans into interest bearing government debt, all while Main St.   businesses and homeowners have borne the full brunt of a credit crunch,   state and local governments fiscally starve, and infrastructure funds   dry up. Finance industry insiders have now obtained a near lock on the   position of Treasury Secretary. When a president like Bush dares to   appoint someone with actual industrial experience, Wall Street’s   displeasure is made manifest, and it generally succeeds in undermining   him. New laws like Dodd-Frank strangle new entrants to the field while   enshrining the privileged status of the too big to fail. The fact that   it allows government to seize these “systematically important financial   institutions” shows not the industry’s weakness but its strength, as big   banks de facto function as instrumentalities of the state, but with   profits privatized and losses socialized.  Not a single major figure in   the events causing the financial meltdowns has gone to jail or even been   prosecuted (only a collection of ponzi schemers and insider traders   who, despite their criminality, had no systematic impact – the crisis   blew up their scams, their scams did not cause the crisis). The list   goes on.
The geographic proximity of New York to Washington, with quick trips   back and forth on the Acela, facilitates this. Clearly, you could get   back and forth on the shuttle without it, but given the Acela’s   popularity, it does seem to have some big benefits in shrinking the   distance between New York and DC. I’d argue this has been unhealthy for   America. If true high speed rail ever came to the NYC-DC corridor, who   knows what might happen?
Perhaps you don’t agree and will feed me to the dogs for this post.   But I think it’s very clear that transportation networks have vast   impact on the structure of society, not just how people and goods get   from Point A to Point B. The interstate highway system is proof of that.   Indeed, advocates of high speed rail (and I’ve been a qualified one   myself, supporting it clearly in the Northeast Corridor but being   skeptical about most others) boast of the positive transformational   effects of HSR as one of the reasons to build it. But as with the   interstate highway system, we need to be aware of the hidden risks as   well.
The Acela is perhaps living proof that high speed rail can reshape   America. It is literally helping rewrite the geographic power map of   America. Unfortunately, at this point don’t think that’s been a good   thing.
This piece originally appeared at The Ubanophile.