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Home Front: Politix
The War on Landlords Has Begun
2020-08-18
[Mises] As the widening gyre that that is 2020 continues to turn, it seems that every day some new disastrous and ill-thought-out proposal is made or policy implemented. Among the chaos, the chorus to cancel rent in particular has stuck out for its sheer insolence and the ease with which it has entered the discourse as a sensible policy solution.

The idea of abolishing rent is not new, but until now it has never really been considered anything but a nutty pipe dream. But with the economic carnage wreaked by the virus and ensuing government lockdown still ongoing it has disturbingly come to be viewed as a conceivable policy option. With tens of millions out of work, the ability to pay for basic necessities like housing is obviously a valid concern, but the callousness of the idea of simply expropriating housing from property owners is disturbing and indicative of darker trends coursing through the body politic in these turbulent times.

One of the most high-profile leaders of the cancel rent movement is Minnesota congresswoman Ilhan Omar, who introduced legislation in April that basically amounts to nothing other than government extortion of landlords. Christian Britschgi reports that the bill would simply cancel all rent and mortgage payments for primary residencies across the entire country until a month after the federal state of emergency has ended. Attempting to collect rent or reporting the nonpayment of rent to credit agencies results in increasing fines, including the seizure of one's property.
Posted by:Clem

#6  Had a buddy who owned rental properties. He said good tenants were like gold. He died of a heart attack which I attribute to bad tenants.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-08-18 17:06  

#5  Rent control in NY did not turn out well. Buildings were never improved for example.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2020-08-18 12:10  

#4  Had a rental in Colorado.
It took a court ordered payment of $4000 to get a tenant out.
Posted by: Skidmark   2020-08-18 10:25  

#3  If the rents are controlled by law or regulation, landlords will get it from the tenants in other ways: additional fees to cover their costs plus a reasonable profit (I informed tenants as part of their move-in walk through that I would be significantly overcharging them for each burnt out lightbulb they left for me to replace when they moved out, or they could do it themselves for the cost of 60 watt incandescents from the grocery store), delaying maintenance until the cost to hold the property matches the rents received, or selling the property to the tenants as condos. This is how slums and multimillion dollar condos happen — we’ve seen all that play out over the half century or more New York City has enforced rent control.
Posted by: trailing wife   2020-08-18 08:36  

#2  Rent is a fact of life, but lowering rent (and other rent-seeking) as a %age of the economy IS a noble goal advocated by actual Capitalists from Adam Smith (via Ricardo onwards). The current parties seem to want to MAXIMISE rent-seeking in it's various forms by subsidising title (yet making it hard to get to all but the biggest companies) in all forms.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2020-08-18 04:40  

#1  Bad enough I had to live through a professional tenant who wound up costing me nearly $20K last year *never mind the stress induced heart attacks), now I gotta hear shit like this. If the state wants to deprive me of rent from my downstairs apartment, the least they could do is knock that deprived rent off of my principal balance. Throw in no real estate taxes for the same time frame and you might actually get some other landlords to take this bullshit seriously. Until then, fuck off.
Posted by: Raj   2020-08-18 01:14  

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