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Tay Zonday
@tayzonday
There is no American “housing crisis”— there’s a supply-hoarding crisis to rig local market prices above the liquidity of local buyer capital. The policy solution is simple: poison-pill tax all non-occupant-owned housing to force immediate sale to local buyers at actual market rates. Allowing unlimited non-local capital to supply-hoard vacant housing is simply anti-resident eugenics. Current residents are too poor, so replace them with richer ones— even if it causes widespread homelessness, forced migration and absurd energy costs for the displaced to commute. It’s as discriminatory as Federal Housing Administration redlining of black neighborhoods in the 1940s.
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lawrenceroman.eth
@lawrenceroman
Agree with you on first point, see link about Blackstone below but disagree on the policy solution, obviously the Blackstone article proves your point Owning a home can always be the American dream but it’s not for everyone, so you poison pill to force investors to sale to locals it’s a bit far fetch because you are assuming that most locals would afford to buy homes at market rates? that’s wrong. I don’t know if you have any experience or data in real estate development in distressed areas. There are a lot of distressed towns in America in need of private capital to turn them around. I worked in the design districts of Miami between 2008-2010, the Uber fancy neighborhood you see now took a lot of private investment to be what it is now. My generation Z daughter used to throw around the word “gentrification” as a negative until explain to her nobody would enjoy the Soho, Brooklyn or Bronx of the late 80s. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/blackstone-raised-rent-prices-double-115500983.html
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Tay Zonday
@tayzonday
That’s a good question. I am confident that most locals could NOT afford to buy homes at inflated market rates. They could only afford to buy at corrected market rates— that reflect a fast sale price using available local owner capital. The investor class likes to believe that inflated market rates which actually depend on profound public subsidy of oligarchy are “natural.” History shows that American public subsidy of private markets is welcome to build the wealth of dominant groups and then outrageous for the marginalized. Take the GI bill that subsidized wealth-building for white World War II vets. The highway system built under Eisenhower’s 90% top marginal Federal income tax let these whites buy suburban homes. Public housing built for blacks in inner cities did not get the same per-capita subsidies in the 1950s. By the lower-tax 1980s when blacks complained about low family wealth, Reagan won by calling them welfare-queens and crack addicts with a “cultural” poverty problem.
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