Is your city living within its means?

Benjamin Browning • May 12, 2025

Financial Principles for Building Municipal Wealth: Part 1 — Living Within Your Means

Cities thrive when they follow the same basic financial principles many households follow: spend within your means, prioritize needs over wants, prepare for downturns, and invest for long-term value. This is the first of a four-part series on how land use affects each principle.

A parcel map showing cost-of-service deficits in red and surpluses in black for each parcel.

Cities, like households, need to live within their means. Most cities understand this at least at a basic level. However, living within their means is more than just avoiding vanity projects and wasteful spending. Often, it means passing up on investment “opportunities.”


Let me elaborate with an example in personal finance. Homes are traditionally seen as great assets and worthwhile investments. They serve an essential function as shelter and allow their owner to build wealth. However, they can be quite costly when expenses like mortgage payments, routine maintenance, utilities, and property taxes are added up. 


That said, only people who understand the costs and are financially ready should buy a house. 


So, back to municipal finance… Infrastructure serves an essential function in communities and helps cities build wealth, making it a valuable asset and a worthwhile investment. However, it too can be quite costly — first to build, then to maintain, and eventually to replace. 


Because of this, cities should only build new infrastructure that they know they can pay for both now and in the future. 


However, many cities build new infrastructure without fully considering maintenance and replacement costs, setting themselves up for failure.


Several years after initial construction, deterioration becomes visible and worsens as the city doesn’t have the money for repairs.


This is many cities’ first failure to live within their means.

Large pothole filled with water in a deteriorating road.

But it doesn’t stop there. As existing infrastructure deteriorates, many cities acquire new infrastructure liabilities, either by intentionally building it themselves or allowing a developer to build it and pass maintenance on to the city. This makes as much sense as someone buying new investment properties when the house they live in is falling apart.


As cities take on more and more infrastructure “investments,” they spend farther and farther outside of their means, moving them closer to insolvency.


But there are ways to prevent this and even mitigate this after it happens… Don’t build infrastructure until you need it. Concentrate value around existing infrastructure until revenue exceeds costs. Prioritize maintenance in high-value areas over low-value areas. 


Regardless, accounting for the long-term costs of infrastructure can go a long way in building resilient community wealth. Failing to do so can lead to financial disaster. Make sure your city is living within its means.





If you would like additional guidance in managing your community’s infrastructure costs, schedule a consultation with us today!

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Once a city has laid a strong fiscal foundation, it can begin making smart investments that improve the quality of life and increase prosperity. This is the fun part: public spaces that draw crowds, policies that attract and create new businesses, and programs that improve residents’ lives. But to be worth it, those investments must return more value than they cost.
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By Benjamin Browning May 19, 2025
This week, we are taking a look at the role of land use plans in achieving a city’s wants and needs. Every city council member, town planner, and resident has an idea of what they want their city to be. With this vision in mind, they draft a land use plan to facilitate what they like and keep out what they don’t. However, these plans often treat fundamental needs as an afterthought, making it more difficult for the city to fulfill its obligations. Putting needs first instead will ultimately give cities greater flexibility to pursue their wants down the road.