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The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City

99% Invisible · Sep 30, 2025

A deep dive into NYC's 1975 fiscal crisis, exploring how mismanagement and shifting politics led to the infamous "Ford to City: Drop Dead" moment.

The 'Ford to City: Drop Dead' Headline Inadvertently United a Fractured New York

While President Ford never uttered the words, the infamous headline created a common enemy. This external threat helped galvanize a city whose internal factions—unions, bankers, politicians—were at each other's throats, fostering a necessary sense of shared purpose to overcome the crisis.

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City thumbnail

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City

99% Invisible·5 months ago

NYC's 1970s Fiscal Crisis Stemmed from Non-Existent Accounting, Not Just Mismanagement

The city wasn't simply bad at accounting; it effectively had no centralized system. Finances were tracked on scraps of paper and in drawers, making it impossible to know the true state of its debt. This systemic failure, not just policy choices, made the collapse inevitable.

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City thumbnail

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City

99% Invisible·5 months ago

Free Tuition at CUNY Became the Central Ideological Battleground in NYC's 1970s Fiscal Crisis

The debate over CUNY's free tuition was more than a line item. For bankers, it symbolized fiscal irresponsibility. For New Yorkers, it represented the city's social contract and a path to mobility, crystallizing two competing visions for the city's future and what it means to be a citizen.

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City thumbnail

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City

99% Invisible·5 months ago

President Ford's Hardline Stance on NYC's Bailout Was Driven by Fear of a Reagan Primary Challenge

Ford's refusal to bail out New York wasn't purely a fiscal decision. It was a strategic political move to outflank Ronald Reagan on the right ahead of the 1976 Republican primary. This shows how national political calculations can directly and severely impact municipal-level crises.

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City thumbnail

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City

99% Invisible·5 months ago

NYC's Fiscal Crisis Marked America's Ideological Shift from 'Great Society' Spending to Austerity

The crisis was a tipping point in American political thought. The preceding era was defined by the 'Great Society' belief in robust government services. The bailout's conditions, forcing deep cuts, signaled the dawn of a new 40-year consensus prioritizing austerity and fiscal conservatism over public spending.

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City thumbnail

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City

99% Invisible·5 months ago

Robert Moses's Insulated Authorities Created the Financial Structure for NYC's Later Collapse

Moses pioneered using independent authorities to issue bonds for infrastructure, sequestering revenue streams like tolls away from the city's general fund. This model starved public transit and other services, creating a structural vulnerability that contributed significantly to the 1970s fiscal crisis long after he was gone.

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City thumbnail

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City

99% Invisible·5 months ago

NYC's Financial Rescue Depended on Union Pension Funds Buying the City's Risky Bonds

In a final, desperate move, the very unions whose members were being laid off became the city's lenders of last resort. By investing their pension funds in the newly created MAC bonds, they effectively bailed out their own employer, a high-stakes move that ultimately averted total bankruptcy.

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City thumbnail

The Power Broker #13: Drop Dead City

99% Invisible·5 months ago