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The bible of doing business with the city of New York (nytimes.com)
164 points by gregorymichael on April 27, 2019 | hide | past | favorite | 26 comments


The statement that New York City's 92 billion budget is greater than most countries surprised me, had to look it up. According to a CUNY page [0], the city's revenue has been around $80 billion the last few years and $70 billion in expenditures. Comparing that to a wikipedia page [1] on government revenues/expenditures does indeed place New York City as collecting and spending more than all but 38 and 35 countries in the world.

[0] https://www.baruch.cuny.edu/nycdata/fiscal_data/gfund-rev_ex...

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_governmen...


It's worth noting that for the same amount of money many countries manage to provide free healthcare, excellent public transportation, decent schools, while also having to maintain armed forces, financial system and a network of embassies abroad.


I don’t understand the comparison you’re trying to make. Like, not per capita and/or without purchasing power adjusted, sure. What does that prove?


Why not?

Say, Czech Republic, has a similar budget and a similar population.

Yes, PPP will be different, but, as I said, running a country is different from running a city.

P. S.: Here's more detail:

Sweden is very close to the US by PPP (https://data.oecd.org/conversion/purchasing-power-parities-p...), it's population is similar to that of NYC (around 10 million) and it's budget is 1 trln SEK, which is roughly $100 bn, so the same amount per capita as NYC.

The point I'm trying to make?

It's not about money.

New York City has enough money to provide its citizens with all the amenities Swedes have, including free healthcare, free child care and pensions. They don't have to tax the rich. They don't need more austerity. They just have to use the money wisely.

Then if we take New York State budget into account, we'll realize this is sufficient to provide all New Yorkers with one more free healthcare, one more free child care and one more pension.


I don't know where you're getting your numbers for the Swedish budget, but the OECD [1] says that their spending is $23,780 per capita, which would make for a $247+ bn budget for a country of 10.4 mn people. So more than double NYC's.

Your PPP argument doesn't hold either. Sweden's PPP is only slightly above the US average, but it would certainly well above NYC's. NYC is one of the most expensive markets in the United States.

You seem to be asserting that if NYC would just fix some inefficiencies, they'd be able to implement a Scandinavian style social welfare state with the savings. I'm sure there is waste in the system, as there is in all large bureaucracies, but to assert that there's so much that we could fund free healthcare out of it is just nonsense.

[1] https://data.oecd.org/gga/general-government-spending.htm


Another piece of NYC esoterica: the city marshals[1], who are unsalaried, appointed by the mayor, independent from the police (and sheriffs), and are tasked with collecting legal judgments.

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City_Marshal


1500+ 4.5% of fees seems ludicrously low, and coupled with the artificial scarcity, very corrupt


It reminds me of how bankruptcy trustees make their money. I was talking with a bankruptcy lawyer about this a while ago. It seemed odd that the court fee for a bankruptcy is only a few hundred dollars but the trustee may have to spend many hours on a complex case.

He explained that the trustee is paid a percentage of the assets they sell off.

Must be nice work if you can get it!



> “We’re black and white because the news is black and white — what is there to color?” Mr. Blachman said.

This sounds like a very poetic and simultaneously very New York thing to say. I don't know Mr. Blachman but I like him already. I know everyone on a first-name basis but he sounds like the kind of person you'd strictly refer to as "Mr. Blachman."

This makes me wonder if other cities have this kind of thing or if it's unique to NYC?


All cities have at least a limited version of this in regards to procurement. [1]

[1] https://www.leaguecity.com/bids.aspx https://eprocurement.cityofchicago.org/OA_HTML/OA.jsp?OAFunc...


I think the op was asking if other cities had characteristic prose.


I can see how it can be read that way but lgregg was right. Thank you though.


Generically they're called gazettes I believe.

Here's a list of national government ones. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_government_gazettes

It can be fascinating reading.


Most states do something like this. The state of ny has the NYS Contract Reporter.

The journaling of election results and other things is somewhat unique and an awesome resource.


The US Government used to publish procurements in something called Commerce Business Daily. By 2002, that had been replaced by the FedBizOps web site, "https://www.fbo.gov/". The paper version is long gone.

NYC puts the City Record online at "https://a856-cityrecord.nyc.gov/". Get your bid in for the new garbage trucks now. It's surprising that NYC still publishes the paper version.


I'm kind of surprised that NYC publishes its own paper of record.


Both its population and its budget exceed those of most US states and most countries - "most" being a literal majority and not an exaggeration.

Does that make it less surprising? Publishing such a paper is routine for national governments around the world, as well as US states.


Indeed, and the city probably has open government laws requiring it to publish all of its business. For a town above a certain size, self-publishing may simply be the most economical route. In my little town, they just include a section of public notices in the local paper every week.


Yeah, not only do the city and state have applicable open government laws, this paper ranges in size from 16 pages to 100 according to the article. (The current edition is 36 pages.)

Combining those facts with the small number of copies that are still physically printed - nowadays it's mostly read for free online - doing it themselves is the only plausible option.


And a police force that likewise rivals militaries both in size and equipment.


Absolutely. NYPD has more employees than the FBI, and lots of powerful capabilities.

https://www.salon.com/2012/09/28/nine_terrifying_facts_about...

(And that link doesn't even account for any changes in the ~6.5 years since it was published...)


Why doesn't the title match the article?


https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

> If the original title begins with a number or number + gratuitous adjective, we'd appreciate it if you'd crop it. E.g. translate "10 Ways To Do X" to "How To Do X," and "14 Amazing Ys" to "Ys." Exception: when the number is meaningful, e.g. "The 5 Platonic Solids."

> Otherwise please use the original title, unless it is misleading or linkbait; don't editorialize.

Arguably the original title is linkbait.


A moderator changed the title because it was baity—maybe not super baity, but still. This is in accordance with site guidelines, as badfrog quoted.

When we do that, we either use a subtitle or a representative phrase from the article body. In this case it was the latter.


Because the title used in the article has extraneous detail that's not all that useful?




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