

Mayor Mamdani's promises will fail—even if he means them. Mayor Zohran Mamdani has promised to freeze rents, make buses free, provide universal childcare, and open NYC-run grocery stores. These ideas sound compassionate. They're emotionally resonant and politically popular. It reminds me of that old Leslie Gore song, Sunshine, Lollipops, and Rainbows Everywhere. Why not throw in unicorns and magic beans? Plans like this ignore two brutal realities: economic logic and institutional limits. Even if Mamdani is sincere, his agenda will collapse. Either he'll have to abandon it, or he'll discover it was just another impossible socialist dream from the start. This criticism isn't cynicism. It's systems analysis. What's astonishing is that voters fall for this wishful thinking over and over again. Well, another factor is that only 25% of NYC's registered voters bothered to show up. Since he won by a shade over 50%, that means about 12.5% of eligible voters voted for him. That's one out of eight; about the same as those falling for email scams. Millennials and Gen-Z internet users are most likely to fall victim to email scams, and these are the same groups that supported Mamdani by about 70%. Of course, at 34, Mamdani himself is in that group. Maybe he is gullible enough to believe his promises. The first problem Mamdani has is the illusion of executive power. New York City's mayor is powerful, but not omnipotent. Mamdani's rent freeze depends on the Rent Guidelines Board, which he does not control. His childcare and transit plans require billions in funding and coordination across city, state, and federal agencies. His tax-the-rich proposal faces fierce resistance from business leaders, moderate Democrats, and a federal government led by President Trump, who has already threatened to cut NYC's funding, calling Mamdani a "Communist" and warning the city has "ZERO chance of success." Even sympathetic analysts admit that Mamdani's proposals are "tough to enact, and tough to enact quickly." That's code for "structurally constrained." The machinery of governance is slow, fragmented, and resistant to radical change. Mamdani may have the vision, but he lacks the levers. Let's assume, for argument's sake, that Mamdani could implement a citywide rent freeze. Would it work? Decades of economic research say no. A meta-analysis of 60 years of rent control studies reveals consistent unintended consequences: Reduced housing supply: Developers avoid building in cities with strict rent controls. Landlords convert rentals to condos or leave units vacant. The result is long-term scarcity. Declining quality: When landlords can't raise rents, they cut back on maintenance. Buildings degrade. Tenants suffer. Misallocation: Tenants stay in units that no longer suit them—empty-nesters in three-bedroom apartments, families crammed into studios. The market loses its ability to match people to space. Higher rents elsewhere: Landlords shift costs to uncontrolled units, driving up prices for new renters. Reduced mobility: Rent-controlled tenants are less likely to move, even for better jobs or housing. Labor flexibility declines. Black markets and discrimination: Scarcity breeds favoritism, informal payments, and exclusion of marginalized renters. These effects aren't theoretical. They've played out in New York, San Francisco, and Berlin. In each case, rent control offered short-term relief but worsened affordability over time. Mamdani's promises, while appealing, are not just economically risky—they're politically perilous. If he retreats from them, he risks alienating his base. If he pushes forward, he may destabilize the very systems he aims to protect. This is the classic socialist reformer's trap: overpromise, underdeliver, and lose credibility. The problem isn't Mamdani's utopian ideals—it's the mismatch between dreams and reality. As the subtitle of my new book, 'Why Socialism Struggles: Exposing the Economic Errors That Undermine Utopian Ideals', reveals, it's the classic Socialist problem: a blind belief that wishing it will make it so. We've seen this before; there are historical parallels. Mayors like Harold Washington in Chicago and Bernie Sanders in Burlington faced similar dilemmas. They entered office with fanciful agendas, only to be blocked by city councils, state legislatures, and economic constraints. A hostile city council stonewalled Washington. Sanders had to compromise with developers to keep Burlington solvent. Even Fiorello La Guardia, one of NYC's most transformative mayors, relied heavily on federal New Deal funding. Without it, his reforms would have stalled. Mamdani has no such lifeline. In fact, he faces federal hostility. Among Mamdani's most radical proposals is a grocery gimmick claiming that a network of city-owned grocery stores can compete with Costco, Walmart, or Kroger. The goal: provide affordable food by eliminating profit motives, rent, and property taxes. It's a populist response to food deserts and rising grocery prices—but economically, it's doomed. The problem? Grocery retail is already a low-margin business. Walmart, the largest grocer in the U.S., operates on a net profit margin of just 2.5%. That's with global scale, optimized logistics, and immense buying power. Mamdani's municipal stores would lack all three. Even with rent and tax exemptions, city-run stores would face: Higher labor costs due to unionization and public-sector wage floors Limited supplier leverage, unable to negotiate bulk discounts like Walmart or Kroger Operational inefficiencies from bureaucratic oversight and political interference Inventory instability, as seen in failed pilots in Kansas City and Florida Replacing market signals with bureaucratic decision-making leads to mispricing, shortages, and waste. Free always sounds fun, but as my new book describes in detail, it never works in practice. Even successful pilots, like Atlanta's Azalea Fresh Market, operate in small, underserved areas—not in hyper-competitive urban markets like NYC. Scaling up would require navigating union contracts, procurement laws, and political scrutiny—while somehow beating Costco, Walmart, or Kroger on price. Without profit incentives, market discipline, or scale, the city will be creating a costly, inefficient system that fails to deliver on affordability. The chart below illustrates the economic reality. NYC stores will have to get the products from the same suppliers as everyone else. Selling them at no net profit doesn't save any money. Every $100 of goods they buy from wholesalers, they will sell for $100. Costco, Walmart, and Kroger sell it for less. This is because they can buy in gigantic quantities, which brings the cost down. NYC stores can't match that.

As you can see, the NYC stores have the highest retail price. Free buses and universal childcare aren't free; they're expensive. NYC's MTA relies heavily on fare revenue. Eliminating fares without a replacement funding stream would cripple service. Universal childcare requires infrastructure, staffing, and sustained investment. It's not a one-time cost—it's a permanent budget item. Mamdani's plan to fund these programs through taxes on the wealthy is politically fraught. New York's tax base is mobile. Push too hard, and capital flees. The result? Budget shortfalls, service cuts, and political backlash. In conclusion, Mamdani's utopian idealism is, like all utopian visions, a wish for a world that doesn't exist. But governance demands more than a utopian vision. It requires structural awareness, economic literacy, and political realism. Without these, his agenda will become a cautionary tale: a populist blueprint undone by institutional inertia and unintended consequences. Is Mamdani perpetrating a scam or falling for one? Who knows? Either way, sorry, NYC, when you let yourself be governed by the 12.5%, this is what you get. Next time, wake up and pay attention.
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