• NateNate60@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    I don’t think private landlords are really that bad. Renting out your dead nan’s house or buying a duplex to letting the other half is fine as long as you charge appropriate rent and treat your tenants well. In an ideal world, houses would not be investments but rather something that everyone can own and live in, but we’re not going to get that by going cold turkey as some people are suggesting. Reform is slow and boring but usually works out better than trying to tear everything down at once.

    The real problem is companies buying up an absurd number of units and hoarding the available housing stock while squeezing tenants and generally just being miserable landlords.

    • Moghul@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Pretty sad to see this kind of attitude. The problem IMO is buying with the intent to rent, and companies owning too much property. I rent, but I don’t think that if you inherit something you’re immediately a bad person until you sell it. Or if you bought something while single, once you move in with a significant other you’re a bad person. I wouldn’t have a problem renting from people like this either. There needs to be % cap on company rentals, and there needs to be a cap on private properties owned, but I don’t personally think the number has to be 1.

      Owning more property and being richer than me doesn’t make someone automatically a bad person. People nowadays can only see black and white. We’re so frustrated and tired of dealing with shit that we can’t empathize with fellow human beings. Not everyone is a “real estate investment firm”.

      • nikita@sh.itjust.works
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        8 months ago

        Exactly. That kind of comment serves to divide and distract us and while we are busy fighting over these relatively tiny sums, the ultra rich are getting richer.

        The solutions you propose make way more sense.

        • Moghul@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          I’m sure there are major issues with that idea as well, such as creating a rigid structure of sale and rental.

          For example here, politicians made it very difficult to get kicked out if you rent a place for more than 2 years. You basically have to agree to move out. All that did is make virtually all landlords only lease for 2 years because it’s hard to get rid of a bad tenant after that. It’s a great thing if you can get it, but it sucks to have to move that often.

          If you limit the % property for rent in a city, maybe companies will build turbo shit apartments (or extremely expensive apartments) for sale, and decent apartments for rent. The monkey paw is strong.

        • Moghul@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          I gave 2 good reasons why someone would have a second home. If you mean purpose, not everyone who owns a second home rents it out, and not everyone who rents it out is doing it for fat profit.

          My uncle owns 2 homes. One he bought with my aunt, and one he inherited. His brother lives in the second home for various reasons and his end of the deal is that he takes care of it. I have another uncle who bought a studio apartment with my aunt maybe 30 years ago, and they mortgaged a new apartment some years ago, when my cousin got too old to sleep in one room with them. They rent out the studio to college students for what I think is a fairly low price. One of them is now retired and they’ve got a good chunk more time to pay on that mortgage and prices have skyrocketed in their area. If shit goes south financially, they have a backup place to live in their old age.

          I’m an immigrant myself and I can tell by the way prices are going here, I’m going to need to find a spouse to mortgage an apartment if I want to buy anything. I don’t think anyone in those situations is some kind of monster for not selling me their second home.

          I think a remote vacation home or cabin or whatever is also a legitimate reason to own 2 properties. I also think hotels and motels fall under owned property, and I think those are legit too.

          Like I said, IMO the problem is with people hoovering up properties specifically to inflate prices and to make profit by doing nothing. It’s rentseekers and bad landlords, not multi-home owners.

          Edit: the relationships here read kinda weird. Both uncles are “by alliance”, married into the family. Of course, they both share ownership of the stuff they bought with my aunts, but idk how the inheritance works, and I’m not gonna ask. The way it’s phrased in the family is that he inherited that house in the countryside and his brother (which is like distant family to me I guess) lives there.

          • OneWomanCreamTeam@sh.itjust.works
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            7 months ago

            There is utility in renting out a space to live in.

            Like, even in an ideal scenario it isn’t really feasible to sell your house and buy a new one every time you move, if you move around frequently enough.

            The problem is when buying a house isn’t an option for the vast majority of people who don’t move around that much.

            • Moghul@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Of course, but who owns more… Idk what to call them. Second homes? Additional homes? And how long are they owned for? Who is causing the ‘shortage’ as it were? Is it people who own one or maybe two extra homes, or is it companies who own 10-story, village sized apartment buildings that they rent out? What about Airbnb property scoopers?

              I don’t have an answer to that, and I’m guessing it differs by city, country, region. I’m not arguing everyone who owns a second home is an angel. I disagree with the thread source comment that paints all 2-home owners as evil.

        • SonnyVabitch@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          What if it’s a new couple of two homeowners who move in together, should they sell one property before the relationship solidifies?

          What if the grandchildren are in secondary school when Nana dies, is the family allowed to hold on to this second property for the few years until the kids move out/in?

          What if you accept a contract position in another town, should you be forced to sell and buy, or is it okay to rent out the home you have and rent another elsewhere?

          My point is that there is nuance at the lower end of the scale, and the enemy is big corporations and landlords of massive portfolios.

          • Eccitaze@yiffit.net
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            8 months ago

            The other flipside is that individual landlords aren’t necessarily going to be any better than larger corporate landlords–for every individual landlord that rents their Nan’s home at cost and keeps rent lower than inflation, there’s probably at least one other landlord that jacks rent up year over year, drags their feet on maintenance, and tries to screw you out of your deposit when you move out. (The ones who do this usually tend to leverage their income into more property and turn into a slum lord, though, so the rule of thumb of ‘don’t make it your only job’ still largely applies.)

            The real core of the issue is that we haven’t built any new public housing for well on 2 decades by now, and the market has decided that the only new housing we should build are million dollar McMansions that squeeze into lots that would previously hold a much smaller house with a decent yard.

            What should be done is a massive investment in public housing at all levels of government to fill in the missing demand for low-cost housing, but we’ve been so collectively conditioned by four decades of Reagan-era “Government is not the solution, it is the problem” neoliberal thinking that the odds of this ever happening is roughly on par with McConnell agreeing to expand the supreme court and eliminate the electoral college.

      • Remy Rose@lemmy.one
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        8 months ago

        As an example of the problem, no one in my entire social circle has any hope of ever owning property, and many of us are just barely skirting homelessness. Unfortunately this is extremely common in the same world where some people own multiple homes. If you found yourself in that situation, I imagine the best course of action depends on where you live, but a good choice might be to convert your property into a non-equity low-income housing cooperative. There are lots of other options though, the main thing is just to get it into the hands of people who need it.

        • Jimbo@yiffit.net
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          8 months ago

          The only hope I ever have of owning property is my mum dying :(

          And even then, she currently owns the property, not the land, so there’s still land rent

            • SonnyVabitch@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              Leasehold is a type of property where you rent the land for a really long time (decades), and build your house on it. Every few years you extend the lease so it has no risk of running out. You don’t know how much the landlord will charge you, or indeed if they extend, although there are some legal protections for leaseholders.

    • antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 months ago

      I kind of find it funny that people on Lemmy are so strictly against owning multiple houses, while it was completely ordinary for many people in my country (Croatia) to own two houses while the country was under literal socialist government (Yugoslavia).

      • Bernie_Sandals@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Was housing guaranteed in Yugoslavia? If everyone was guaranteed at least a shitty apartment, it would explain why there was less hate towards those who own several houses.

        • antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          8 months ago

          less hate towards those who own several houses

          There wasn’t hate, period. I find it a foreign and even anachronistic mindset, I’d sooner expect people here to be simply jealous of those better-off. Also, owning several houses, not just two, could be problematic, the govt would probably try to nationalise some of them, at the very least in the early period.

          I don’t know the details of how it was all managed, housing wasn’t definitely guaranteed (SFRY had a rapid urbanisation of the population, and apparently it wasn’t easy to meet the demand for new housing), but overall the rate of homelessness was quite low, in part also thanks to the culture that didn’t mind large families living in a single house.

      • zazo@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Depends on your region, but in general if you can find at least 3 people you want to live with, you can apply to establish a cooperative.

        Do note that securing a mortgage would probably be a bit harder than buying on your own, but with more people you can acquire a larger space and split the costs that way.

        Fundamentally, it’s unlikely it will be cheaper than buying outright - however you’ll have a community of people to rely on if at any point you become temporarily unable to pay your installments, which can make it safer than self-ownership.

        But the biggest plus comes when the mortgage is paid off, as then the coop can decide if you’d rather slash prices to include just bills, or keep the same monthly amount but put the extra towards a shared coop fund that can be used to convert more landlord owned properties into cooperative housing.

        In my area - non-mortgaged coop properties have about 40% lower monthly payments.

          • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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            8 months ago

            If the coop was smart, and it’s not a temporary situation or something along those lines, you pay their equity out and wish them luck, but yeah the problem with any coop is always the cooperative part.

            • zazo@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              Yep, the idea is that because the people living at the coop decide who they want to live with (both for existing and new members) the org would have an incentive to cooperate and resolve issues, instead of relying on a third party to be an arbiter that doesn’t have a direct stake in your living conditions.

      • jeremyparker@programming.dev
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        8 months ago

        The idea is sound but for most places I’ve heard of (ie in my city), condos just pay a management company to do all the landlord stuff, so even as an owner, I still have to call some crabby woman when the roofers drilled a hole in my A/C and fight with her – and then also fight with the roofers – to get it fixed

        • the_crotch@sh.itjust.works
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          8 months ago

          There are self managed condo associations, in fact mine is discussing it because we hate our management company. The problem is the stuff the management company was doing now falls on us. Someone has to volunteer to handle repairs, maintenance, document management, bills, etc. some of this stuff amounts to a full time job and you’re doing it for free. If youre the guy who handles critical stuff like leaks or heat, now you’re on call 24/7 in addition to your actual job that pays the bills.

          • vonbaronhans@midwest.social
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            8 months ago

            Or you could own a regular single family home, have no management, AND have nobody to split the responsibilities with! It’s great! I’m not bitter at all!

          • zazo@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            In a coop setting you would agree on collective individual responsibilities so everyone has to contribute and spread the burden in a way that doesn’t silo people into unequal jobs.

            As someone who lived in a condo - the main issues were that because people individually own their flats - I feel there’s a distinct line between private and shared ownership, making it easy to disregard communal duties.

            Furthermore, because existing residents have little say in who gets to live in their building - you can end up in situations where someone can repeatedly break rules and norms (ie had a person smoke in the elevator for years despite being told not to) and nothing can really be done apart from trying to sue them which isn’t an effective way of dealing with problems.

            In a coop setting people can democratically discuss and as a last resort even decide to part ways with individuals who won’t contribute (from each according to their ability, to each according to their needs obv) since on a hyper-local level everyone is immediately involved with the living conditions of everyone else around them.

  • neptune@dmv.social
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    8 months ago

    IF yOu ArE ANtICAPiTaLIST Why dO yOU HavE A JOb? energy I’m getting from this post.

    No, I don’t think renting out your first home is a grave issue, but it’s a snow flake in the avalanche for why housing is unaffordable. Housing is either a necessity that should be affordable, or an investment that grows and grows in value. Society has to pick one. And it would be obviously ruinuos for the status quo of housing to outpace inflation to continue.

  • xlash123@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    There are situations where it does make sense to rent or put a property up for rent. For example, if you are relocating temporary for a job or education, it would make a lot of sense to get a short term lease, rather than buy or stay in a hotel (depending on price, of course). An individual who know that a property of theirs won’t be used for some time can then lease it out to this person. It’s a win-win, as tenants don’t deal with the process of closing or the responsibility of ownership, and the landlord makes some extra cash on the underutilized property.

    However, the problem really comes down to when it becomes a business. Companies buy up large quantities of land and property and rent them out, allowing them to shift the costs of mortgage and taxes to the tenant while reaping the benefits of increasing equity. Furthermore, the amount of property for sale decreases, artificially lowering supply for housing to own. This drives up costs. As the company buys up more and more property, they also get to jack up the prices because of their local monopoly. In the individual landlords case, this wouldn’t happen because they have to compete with the rest of the diverse market. So overall, prices go up for housing everywhere.

    I see a few paths to a solution.

    1. Limit the number of properties a corporation/individual can lease and/or increase taxes exponentially. This prevents the ability to lease out tons of property, while still allowing businesses to own multiple properties as needed for actual work.
    2. Remove restrictions on single family only housing and residential zoning. This is mainly a US issue, but it would allow for denser housing options, increasing supply in places where that is currently impossible. It would also create more opportunities for economic growth, as placing residencies in areas with businesses reduces demand on cars and makes it easier to network with people.
  • nikita@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    I think its a weird argument to say all landlords are evil because even if they were forced to sell their real estate properties, they would just put their wealth elsewhere. They would instead become shareholders or creditors.

    The problem is more so in general with people that have a lot of wealth, regardless of how they choose to hold it.

    And furthermore, the problem isn’t even with people that have a bit of wealth, it’s with billionaires. If we taxed those assholes properly then governments could just afford to build high rises which would drive real estate prices down.

    • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      Landlords are unique in that they are entirely rent-seeking, ie they create no new value at all and seek to eternally gain income without losing any amount of ownership.

      Billionaires are certainly the most excessive, but all Capitalists work against the Proletariat.

      • AWistfulNihilist@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rent-seeking

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_rent

        I really want more people to engage with the idea that the utter worst thing a person can do in a economic sense is “rent-seek”. The IDEA of turn key businesses, investment properties, money for nothing means you are taking from someone else.

        They’ve attempted to expand this downward into welfare, but that’s a ridiculous canard that doesn’t examine just how much money is being siphoned from the working class by people who leverage capital against them.

        • nikita@sh.itjust.works
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          8 months ago

          Thanks for the links. I understand these concepts better now.

          By that definition shareholders are rent seekers too. They extract way more value from the company than they add to it. Except instead of making money through leasing, it’s through dividend collection, capital gains and share buybacks.

          As for loan givers, you could argue their existence provides value because it gives people access to funds they wouldn’t otherwise have had, allowing them to purchase goods they wouldn’t have been able to. However, when the whole system is set up such that going into debt is a requirement then the service offered by the loan giver doesn’t really add that much value to society.

          In fact, if loans weren’t so tolerated, the market or government would have been forced, at an earlier point in time, to do something to reduce the costs of things we purchase with loans like real estate, cars and education (in places where it isn’t free/cheap).

          Instead, loans artificially increase the cost of things to the point where buying them without getting a loan becomes impossible. For instance, by increasing the amortization period of mortgages from 10 years to 20 years to 30 years, the price of a home increased such that now it is completely out of reach to people looking to buy property without a loan.

    • pup_atlas@pawb.social
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      8 months ago

      Wealth inequality is definitely a huge problem, but the issue with landlords is that they are artificially restricting the supply of, and price gouging an already incredibly limited resource that scene needs to survive. At least with food, someone else can always make more and sell it for cheaper, or you can decide to eat something else. But with how housing is now, it’s not uncommon for just a few companies to snatch up nearly all available houses in an area, and there’s only so much “I’ll just move a little farther out” before you are an unsustainable distance from your workplace. That isn’t true of hardly any other market.

      • Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        8 months ago

        Yeah, buying vegetables gives you the seeds to your own solution to hunger (to a minor degree and with caveats) but renting does nothing to give you the seeds to a house, especially if the rent is so high there is no practical way to save money.

        • pup_atlas@pawb.social
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          8 months ago

          Agreed, in fact renting actively takes AWAY the solution to housing, because you can’t save AND the money you pay in just enables landlords to buy up more property, thus making it all more valuable.

      • nikita@sh.itjust.works
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        8 months ago

        That’s true but what I mean is that the other options for wealthy people are just as exploitative.

        Shareholders exploit workers and add nothing to society.

        Creditors harass people and exploit the fucked up loan system that regular people are forced to rely on, also adding no benefit to society.

        • pup_atlas@pawb.social
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          8 months ago

          Are there though? Beyond food, water, and shelter— stuff gets a lot more… easy to avoid. Food is something easy enough to shop elsewhere, and it’s possible for competitors to come in and undercut existing brands. Water is (for most of the US) relatively easy to acquire cheaply, or even free. But shelter is something that is pretty much impossible to compete with. Every area has a finite amount of space, and once it’s owned, it’s owned. Sure one landlord might lower their rent to attract new tenants, but it’s effectively guaranteed to never have more than a few competitors before you start moving a significant distance away. It’s one of the few things that’s impossible to avoid. You HAVE to exist somewhere, you can’t choose not to, and you can’t shop around endlessly like you can with other things.

          • nikita@sh.itjust.works
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            8 months ago

            You need to work to get the funds to pay for food, water and shelter. Or you go into debt to afford those things, which is probably worst.

            By working you are serving the shareholders that will do their best to exploit you. Their greed will funnel it’s way to you in the workplace through shitty policies or a strict boss or low wages or whatever self serving bullshit they come up with.

            I guess being exploited by a shareholder feels less direct than by a landlord. However, if all landlords became shareholders, the injection of of capital into company shares would make upper management have to serve the shareholder’s interests even more, ultimately resulting in an increase in the amount of exploitation we experience in the workplace.

            I see where you are coming from with the inherent lack of housing supply, but we are nowhere close to running out of finite space. Especially when we are able to create way more homes by building vertically.

            And I’m not saying landlords aren’t exploitative. I’m saying that other forms of ownership as just as exploitative.

            • pup_atlas@pawb.social
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              8 months ago

              Homelessness is worse than debt, just to be clear. You can survive with debt, there is no risk of death. Homelessness can, and often is deadly. This is just a fact.

              We are at, and even past running out of space that is in commute proximity to an economic zone capable of supporting a non-impoverished lifestyle for the VAST majority of citizens. There’s tons of space in the middle of no where, but that space isn’t useful to anyone because no one can support themselves there. I don’t mean “find work” support yourself (though that too), I mean “have a grocery store within an hour drive one way from your house” support yourself.

              As for working under capitalism, you’re right, it still sucks, but you can choose where you work, and there are choices to be had pretty much everywhere. The same is not true of housing, especially with the rise of suburban sprawl. You can choose to work remotely for any business you want, but you can’t choose to “exist” remotely. You have to take up space somewhere. Sure there’s space in the middle of nowhere, but how will you buy gas for your car with no gas station, food to feed yourself with no grocery store. Most of the country is like this. That is the whole problem, you simply can’t survive outside of an economic zone of a certain size, and all the housing in that area is being hoarded. I’m not arguing against the evils of capitalism, but to claim that not being allowed to exist anywhere isn’t a bigger problem then “I’m not being paid what I’m worth” is just a misunderstanding of the problem.

  • riwo@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    8 months ago

    i think the “who is getting the guillotine?” is malicious framing. i assume u just worded it that way because it sounds funny but it still has effect of making ppl more reluctant to voice criticism.

    no landlords should be killed. their private property should be transfered to a public ownership model and portions of their financial wealth should potentially be seized. ideally all housing would be made public but as a transitionary step, at least private housing should be.

    for your examples, since we currently dont have good options for simply making those houses into public property, with the peopl who previosly owned them getting dibs on living there, its fair for them to keep the houses as private property for a while, without living there. letting other people live there for the meantime is also a good idea. just let them live there for free, under the condition of keeping the house livable and paying for upcomming costs. maybe offer yourself as a hireable manager for the house, if you want to get moeny out of it. why should people have to pay you for using something you dont need, if thats not reducing the value?

    and yes, i am aware that being ethical with ones private property is hard, because its discouraged by current policies and public mentalities, but that doesnt mean its something we shouldnt strive for, on an individual and grander social level.

  • Hikermick@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    How about buying a cheap house that needs a lot of work and renting out rooms to your friends so that all of you can have an affordable place to live?

      • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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        8 months ago

        If the mortgage is in your name and you charge them rent, you don’t co-own the house, you’re a landlord that’s gaslighting your “friends” and probably getting free maintenance and labor to boot.

        Everyone would be on the mortgage if the goal wasn’t to exploit them to build your own equity.

        Do you exploit them less than others would? Possibly. Or maybe not depending on circumstance. Congratulations on being the last in the line.

  • AItoothbrush@lemmy.zip
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    8 months ago

    Renting isnt the problem. If tou own two houses and an apartment and rent out them except the one youre living in that isnt really the problem. When a single person owns a whole city thats the problem. Most people rent out houses/apartments as a small passive income. If its your only form of income that means youre not really contributing to society. Youre getting money for an asset that already exists.