A Map of the U.S. by Property Value Instead of Land Area
I would like to see a map of where Rent Control and "affordable housing" rules have destroying the private sector's incentive to create reasonably priced new housing. I'm sure the same counties would be highlighted.
Such practices are particularly unpalatable because they amount to the government forcing landlords to rent nice flats at a loss to potentially disruptive tenants at the risk of their driving down overall rental values and the certainty that their subsidized presence will fuel ongoing resentment from neighbors whose rents will have to inflated to subsidize their "protected" neighbors.
The article seems to be predicated on the belief that everyone has a right to live anywhere they want whether they can afford it or not.
Such practices are particularly unpalatable because they amount to the government forcing landlords to rent nice flats at a loss to potentially disruptive tenants at the risk of their driving down overall rental values and the certainty that their subsidized presence will fuel ongoing resentment from neighbors whose rents will have to inflated to subsidize their "protected" neighbors.
The article seems to be predicated on the belief that everyone has a right to live anywhere they want whether they can afford it or not.
deserves a good job, a good house, a good retirement, etc......
the essence of communism. -- j
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A stubborn unwillingness to sell something at less than the going rate is normal and healthy.
The real problem creating housing shortages is the scam known as urban planning -- in which local governments (controlled by the existing homeowners) keep most of the unbuilt land off the market by force of law in order to drive home prices up as high as possible and keep them there. So long as this cartel arrangement operates, there will be an artificial shortage of homes.
Most countries have the same problem -- but at least in poor countries there are areas outside most cities where illegal building is tolerated, greatly reducing the number of homeless people. But no jurisdiction in the US will do that; they apparently believe that it's better to be homeless than to live in "unsafe" housing. Yet another area in which the Left dismisses others' suffering with "Let them eat cake."
Jan
.
The exceptions I know in California are Berkeley and Santa Monica, and those are places I wouldn't want to live anyway because of outrageous laws on other topics.
building I lived in last year. It was alleged to be un-
safe. I disagreed. But anyway, I had not gone to
the City and complained. And if I choose to live in
an old run-down shack, it's nobody"s G--d----d
business but mine and the landlord's. Now I
live in a place the costs nearly twice as much.
Apparently, the City turned it over to some
scavenger who likes to "gentrify" buildings, and
I heard something about a message from her,
but I really don't want to deal with her. If she
uses the government to take other people's
property away, then it seems to me that renting
from her would be like receiving stolen goods.
(Aside from the fact that I probably couldn't
afford it anyway).
---Oh well. Mark Twain once said, (I am quoting
from memory), "There is not a foot of land on
earth that is in possession of its rightful owner."
When they start talking "sustainability" I try to reframe the discussion by talking about our current levels of government spending. THAT isn't sustainable!
Why do you think the Sierra Club has the same demographics as Marin County? The real motive of the leaders of the green movement has always been to keep us middle class riff-raff down, so they, our betters, can continue to enjoy the unbuilt land near their big, beautiful homes and the resulting lack of traffic in their neighborhoods. After all, since they've already got theirs, no more nice homes need to be built, right? Besides, someone [ethnic] might move next door to them. Can't have that. And best of all, all the useful idiots who make up the rank-and-file of the green movement will give the Sierra Clubbers credit for "saving the planet" by enacting all these exclusionary laws.
(Understand I have no issue with rich people living well -- unless they use cronyism to prevent others from doing the same. Here, they are doing just that.)
Sounds very similar to the law which set up the housing crash a few years back, which forced lenders to forgo good financial practices when processing a home loan in the favor of minority status.
That didn't turn out well for anybody. Government at its finest, at the expense of the rest of us. As always.