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Originally Posted by Pedestrian
Absolutely true. But at least it gives the poor a greater share of access to what supply there is compared to the more affluent.
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This makes no sense, because Section 8 tenants still end up with the lousiest housing available, they just pay more for it (and everyone else pays more, too). It's just a way of handing over taxpayer money to landlords (the same way that subsidizing home mortgages is a way of handing taxpayer money over to banks and existing property owners). Rather than give that money away for nothing, why not use it to build more housing?
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Originally Posted by Pedestrian
I also support all sorts of ways to increase supply and condemn the various laws that suppress supply which, at least in CA, come mostly from the left.
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It's not just laws that impede development. Banks, if allowed to, will always make more credit available to the purchasers of homes than the builders of homes. That makes sense -- a home mortgage is a relatively safe investment, a building mortgage is among the riskiest. And the bank profits either way. In fact, the only ceiling on the banking industry's profits from its residential lending business, beyond the amount of people's incomes, is the percentage of that income they spend on housing (and consequently the amount of housing debt they accrue). In a tight housing market, that percentage goes up. When housing prices fall due to a glut of new development, that percentage goes down. So they'll always be wary of financing too much housing development.
If you want to increase supply faster than increases in demand, you cannot do it by subsidizing demand, and you cannot expect help from private lenders. So the government must put resources to work directly to increase the supply of housing, either by making loans (which it can do easily, if allowed to) or by creating public agencies to build housing.
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Originally Posted by Pedestrian
France's banlieues and Italy's equivalent are just as bad or worse. The positive examples of public housing are mostly from formerly homogeneous, smaller countries like the Netherlands and Scandinavia and are more the exception than the rule continent-wide. Furthermore, it's easy to predict that as these countries become more diverse due to immigration from non-European places, the environment in their public housing will deteriorate.
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At least you recognize that there are positive examples of public housing. That's a start! But seriously: the problem with public housing is diversity due to immigration??! Hah. Half of Amsterdam's population is non-Dutch, and half lives in social housing of fantastic quality. Ditto in Vienna, where 62% of people live in social housing.
Maybe the problem with the banlieues has more to do with their segregation, poor planning and decades of neglect and disinvestment -- the same problems that America has with its public housing?