Mamdani’s cost of living ‘crisis’ is simply a cover for government excess |
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Mamdani’s cost of living ‘crisis’ is simply a cover for government excess
Never let a crisis go to waste.
That’s the idea behind Mayor Mamdani’s latest ploy, a racial-equity report and “true cost of living” measure that supposedly shows that 62% of New Yorkers — about 5 million people — can’t make ends meet.
The plan is simple: Set the bar unreasonably high, declare a sweeping crisis and use that to justify a bigger, more intrusive government.
Yes, life here is expensive, for lots of reasons.
Rent is brutal and getting worse: Manhattan’s median rents now exceed $5,000.
Child care is crushing, partly because center operators can’t find adequate facility space.
Public schools don’t offer a good enough education to keep families in the city. But instead of fixing those cost drivers by increasing the supply of housing and reforming public schools, City Hall is redefining the problem in a way that makes massive intervention look inevitable.
The city isn’t merely defining poverty; it’s asking who can meet a much bigger, softer, more elastic standard of economic security.
For families with children, that threshold is $159,197.
Of course, millions fall short — by design.
Under the mayor’s framework, a supermajority of New Yorkers are cast as being in need of government rescue.
Once that need is established, City Hall gets a free pass to push more spending, more mandates, more programs, more rules — and, ultimately, more control.
Just look at what comes attached to it.
The equity plan covers 45 agencies, seven domains, more than 200 goals, 800 strategies and 600 indicators.
Who hears “600 indicators” and thinks, “Finally, the city is going to work better?”
No, what it means is more and bigger government, slower bureaucracy and fatter budgets.
The racial disparities noted in the report should be addressed but not by doing what hasn’t worked time and again.
About 43.7% of white New Yorkers fall below the Mamdani threshold, compared with 65.6% of black New Yorkers and 77.6% of Hispanic New Yorkers.
Unequal earnings matter, but the real engine of the crisis is New York’s crushing costs, driven by the private sector’s inability to supply more of what the city needs.
That should lead to a simple agenda.
Reform zoning to build more housing, and approve it faster.
Make it easier and faster to establish child-care facilities.
Lower administrative barriers.
Encourage high-paying employers to set up shop in a city where they can find talented strivers from across the country eager to make their fortunes.
Instead, Mamdani is building a giant administrative scaffold around the problem, rather than getting to work.
It comes as The mayor is already staring down a budget mess.
By his own calculation, the city needs between $5.4 billion and $7.1 billion more revenue over this fiscal year and next.
City Comptroller Mark Levine says fiscal year 2026 expenses are projected to run $4.53 billion above revenues — and the gap could hit $6.25 billion without assumed savings and state help.
What New Yorkers need is a government that lowers costs and gets out of its own way.
The mayor’s goal is not just to describe hardship but to move the goalposts so far to the left that bigger government becomes the only answer on the table.
That should be out of bounds.
Santiago Vidal Calvo is a Cities policy analyst at the Manhattan Institute.
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