In the same way, rent controls have proven detrimental to controlling housing markets governments efforts to protect renters from eviction may result in unintended consequences. What seems by many a noble pursuit will cause many landlords to exit the business or take rental units offline. The government's action of halting evictions could be seen as an extension of current policies that sidestep dealing with the problem that society is creating a growing number of irresponsible tenants. The ugly fact is that government housing cherry-picks the best of the low-income renters providing them with very low rents and nice apartments. The rest they dump on the private sector.
Now that the eviction moratorium has expired, the covid pandemic predicts a wave of evictions is about to take place. The Urban Institute estimates the with the expiration of the eviction moratorium more than 12.3 million or 28 percent of America's 43.8 million renters are at risk of losing their homes. Landlords that have had enough have begun an unsavory part of their job filing eviction paperwork for tenants who haven't paid rent for 30 days or in many cases, months. This, of course, comes just as some 25 million Americans are about to lose the generous weekly $600 federal unemployment checks.
Unfortunately, the clowns in Washington are busy playing politics with this. In remarks outside of the White House on Wednesday, Trump and Treasury Secretary Mnuchin acknowledged that while the administration and Democrats remain far apart on any kind of deal. This resulted in them pushing for the extensions of both programs. Trump emphasized that halting evictions and keeping people in their homes has become a priority. A big part of the problem is that letting people remain in the property without paying rent does not stop the bills a landlord must pay from coming due. This rapidly makes being a landlord a money-losing proposition.
80% Of New Units Are High-End Luxury Units |
Ultimately higher costs for taxes, local fees, utilities, insurance, maintenance cost, general labor, and just about everything will be passed on to the renter. While the market has responded to rental housing needs for higher-income households, there are alarming trends that suggest a growing inability or desire to supply housing that is affordable for middle- and working-class renters this becomes very noticeable when we look at the population with very low incomes. Developers have displayed little interest in, or they simply can't afford to add anything but luxury units.
There's a huge unhealthy disparity in high-end rents versus low-end rents across the country and with building cost being similar between constructing high-end versus low-income units why would anyone want to deal with the low end of the market and all the trash that comes with it when you consider that;
- Our government has been busy encouraging people who have no business owning a house to buy one regardless if they have any idea of how to maintain it. This government policy is to generate a slew of programs geared to assist first-time home-buyers and others with special incentives and aid. This often means anyone with any kind of credit and even getting all their income from government programs often move out of apartments to buy a house. This creates higher turnover rates and leaves the apartment manager forced to lease the unit to someone with even less income or no credit.
- Another part of our government's housing policy funds and determines what is built, the problem is a massive amount of money is flowing into apartments that most people cannot afford. Low-interest rates coupled with speculators using "Wall Street" money are creatively financing these units out of thin air. From somebody that knows the industry, you can take it to the bank that it will not end well when these new units go online and are unable to meet income projections. A while back, an article in Business Insider warned the US apartment market has become overdeveloped, with supply outpacing demand, especially in the most expensive segment of the market but that has not slowed building.
- Building and providing housing to low-income people often proves to be a thankless job that nobody wants. This is beginning to put a great deal of pressure on the system as private sector landlords that do not partner with government programs suffer the abuse. Simply put, government housing policy has failed to address the housing needs of the growing group of dysfunctional individuals that are the bane of society. Few honest people desire to put up with the endless crap such a position constantly dishes out. Inventing market terms such as "sub-luxury segment" to describe basic housing only confuses the issues that need to be addressed.
Housing Policy Throws Older Units "Under The Bus" |
The unintended consequences of government policy which sidesteps responsibility for America's dysfunctional poor over time have added a great deal to our housing woes by driving up the cost of renting for everyone else. Many people do not realize that over the years government in many areas of the country have put massive disincentives in place for those interested in renting housing. Those include competing with them on many levels. Private landlords are forced to pay taxes that go to subsidize government-backed competitors that reject the least desirable tenants then ask the private sector to provide them with shelter. This allows government-backed projects to provide a better product at a lower price which often results in such projects being poorly run.
Bad Tenants Can Do A Lot Of Damage |
Landlord claims are usually pursued and disputed in the small claims division of the court where getting an eviction or judgment against a bad tenant has become increasingly time-consuming and expensive. Adding to this ugly reality are limits that often allow only a fraction of a landlord's loss to be covered, these can be as low as $1,500. It is not difficult for unpaid rents and damages to greatly exceed this amount. It must be noted that getting a judgment in your favor does not mean it will ever be paid and that these people continue to move from place to place causing havoc wherever they go.
Stories that delve into what is happening in our communities are important, I consider them as "micro-economic" images of what is occurring in many places across America. A show on Netflix titled "Renters" looks into the misadventures of property managers and their troublesome renters in New Zealand. It reveals similar housing problems exist in many countries. My attitude may be skewed by living in one of if not the lowest rent areas in America. A ZeroHedge article stated that "attractive rents" are a relative term as the monthly dues for a tiny studio apartment in NYC will still run you $2,681, or $64.92 per sq. ft. we're pretty sure that implies the average studio is roughly 495 square feet...or about the size of the average living room in all those "fly-over states" that elitist New Yorkers love to look down upon. The fact is, rents in my area are often as little as $650 a month for a two-bedroom one-bath 950 sq. ft. apartment. This is far less for essentially the same product.
Footnote; I may have understated how much regulations also add to higher rents. In some states, the government is even debating putting the burden and responsibility for keeping occupied units clean upon the landlord. Also, it is not possible to evict someone during the Christmas Holidays in my area for any reason, you can file but no action will be taken until after the holidays are over. One way to address or level the playing field would be to move away from public housing and give those needing housing aid "rent only vouchers" that could be used with any landlord rather than putting these people into a quasi-government ran project. More on the subject of evictions in the article below.
https://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2016/05/evictions-in-america-plight-of-poor.html
Many good points, but you appear not to have had to deal with being a low-income tenant. Landlords violate leases and the law regularly. They post eviction notices for late rent that is within stated grace periods. They refuse to make needed repairs, forcing tenants to either live with unsafe code violations or hire lawyers - at the risk of an angry landlord who will find a way to kick you out, or even an angry town that won't rent to you at all. And why -- in a home with bare electrical wiring hanging from the walls and raw sewage bubbling out of the bathtub -- should a landlord expect a tenant to care about fixing holes the kids kick in the walls and coffee stains on the carpet? When you are spending half of your income on housing life is hard enough already.
ReplyDeleteThat said, simply freezing evictions is indeed stupid if not combined with subsidies to the landlords.
Many good points, but you appear not to have had to deal with being a low-income tenant. Landlords violate leases and the law regularly. They post eviction notices for late rent that is within stated grace periods. They refuse to make needed repairs, forcing tenants to either live with unsafe code violations or hire lawyers - at the risk of an angry landlord who will find a way to kick you out, or even an angry town that won't rent to you at all. And why -- in a home with bare electrical wiring hanging from the walls and raw sewage bubbling out of the bathtub -- should a landlord expect a tenant to care about fixing holes the kids kick in the walls and coffee stains on the carpet? When you are spending half of your income on housing life is hard enough already.
ReplyDeleteThat said, simply freezing evictions is indeed stupid if not combined with subsidies to the landlords.
Hi Greg Colvin, It's not a strong argument when you say "Landlords violate leases...", etc. That is equivalent to me (a landlord) saying "Tenants destroy homes they rent...". Both are SOMETIMES true. But your statement is all inclusive of landlords. I ask that you re-think and restate your thesis. Thank you
Delete"I wrote a comment that appeared to get eaten by the "Publish" button when I logged into Google. Will wait a while before retyping."
ReplyDeleteAnd that comment claimed it was getting published when I hit Preview. Go figure.
Sorry for the delay but comments need to be approved or all we get is hundreds of garbage spam. Once it starts it is difficult to stop.
DeleteThanks for your comment.
Got it. Thanks for thus useful blog, Bruce. I can sympathize with your plight as a landlord, and think it's a vicious circle. After years of the kind of stuff I described many people (not me) just quit caring and abandon their mess since they will lose their deposit anyway. And of course other times my neighbors get strung out on the meth being dealt by the local sheriff and turn their places into superfund sites. And of course some people were just never housebroken. Closing the circle, a lot of decent landlords just give up, leaving tenants to deal with the indecent ones, who rent places no decent tenant would want. It's a nasty world.
ReplyDeleteAnd again, apropos the current troubles, I don't see why the problem of a pandemic destroying peoples ability to pay rent got turned into an eviction-prevention problem rather than a landlord-support problem. Soon enough we may see enough tenants on the street that we'll have to deal with it. Maybe that will lead to real change in how we keep people sheltered -- one can dream.