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Richard Mellor
Afscme Local 444, retired
Here we go again with the housing market. What is housing. It’s human shelter that’s what it is to millions of people. There are also millions who have no shelter even when houses, sit empty. And there’s millions more who can’t afford the cost of it. Human shelter, like all crucial social needs, is a business in our society and if you can’t buy it, profits cannot be made from it; then you do without.
People go to extreme measures to be able to buy a home; they put off having children. They work maybe two sometimes three jobs, all so they can borrow money from the moneylender and pay maybe two or three times for the home after interest payments. If they’re lucky, they may own it after 30 years or so.
The whole system is set up to function this way; a whole section of social parasites will get rich through it. It is a disgusting and without doubt, most barbaric way for society to house its citizens. But it’s not about housing people is it. It’s about a few people getting very rich off of what should be a right; human shelter.
After the crash in 2008 when some five million people had their homes stolen from them by the moneylenders, (people didn’t “lose” them) huge capital management companies and private equity firms like Blackrock got in to the business of purchasing single family homes. These firms are among the largest landlords in the country and usually prefer their victims in one place like an apartment complex, but the rewards were too great and investors made a killing.
The housing market is ablaze once again and big institutional investors are now buying up entire subdivisions from home manufacturers. These firms and their investors have accumulated billions as the US working class and poor have seen their living standards decline and never being ones for actually “earning” money through hard work, the investors need to find a lucrative home for their profits.
By “selling entire neighborhoods to investors.” the Wall Street Journal reported this week*, “The country’s most prolific homebuilder booked about twice what it typically makes selling to the middle class….”. (In the US, the mass media and the trade union hierarchy refer to workers as middle class. There are no workers here, just rich, poor and middle class.
Reading serious big business outlets like the Journal gives working people a glimpse in to the world of the big capitalists, the hedge fund managers, financiers and other coupon clippers who get rich off those that work for a living. “…yield chasing investors are snapping up single family houses to rent out or flip.” (my added emphasis) the Journal article states as if this is some sort of respectable activity.
For the uninitiated, the full term is “house flipping” It is one of the most
disgusting terms and it sickens me when I see it written and think of the
sacrifices working people make to own a home and the tragedy of homelessness.
In my town, a closet costs $1000 a month; I feel sorry for young people. We
should all be very angry at this crowd and the politicians and their two
parties that allow it. When you hear the term, lobbying, in regards to politics, what it describes is people like
those who get rich off your need for a home taking some of that money they rip
from you and giving it to legislators to make laws that keep the ball rolling.
One head of a real estate consulting firm tells the Journal that in many of the major housing markets in the nation, “….about one in every five homes sold is bought by someone who never moves in.”. Not only that, even with very low interest rates how can an individual or a single family compete in this market with an organized gang of housing speculators. In Houston TX for example, 24% of homes purchased are bought by investors and the same head of the consulting firm admits that these developments will, “…. make US housing permanently more expensive.”, and that means more insecurity, more stress to gather the required capital and pay the moneylenders their interest. Consequences of this existence is domestic violence, drug and alcohol addiction, family fragmentation and in worst cases, total breakdown and the violence associated with that.
So as the “yield
chasing investors” salivate at the chance of money without working, the
consulting firm warns that the “institutionalization
of real estate investors has set the stage for another speculative, investor
driven home price bubble.” It’s not like they don’t know what their activity
leads to but they don’t suffer in the way millions of working class and middle
class people do and like the fox in the henhouse, can’t stop the killing; they
are driven mad themselves by the laws of the system.
The consulting firm assures the investors that “The bubble has room to grow before it bursts…”, home prices rose
11% in 2020 and are expected to rise 12% this year so the danger is there, but as
one of their own, Chuck Prince , the former CEO of Citigroup pointed out, “….as long as the music is playing, you’ve
got to get up and dance.”. Prince is right about that from the capitalist’s
point of view, what we have to do though is stop the music.
They know the
consequences of this for millions of people but because most of them won’t
experience it themselves it’s easier for them to put it aside. Anyway, what can
they do, it’s a matter of life and death for them and there is no alternative.
We are capitalists Nancy Pelosi, one of the most powerful Wall Street
politicians in the US, told one naïve youth in 2019, that’s just the way it is.
There is an alternative though. How can there not be? Society has the resources; labor power, capital, and all the skills necessary to provide everyone with decent living conditions. No one need be homeless, no one should be without the best healthcare society has to offer. The problem is a political one. Housing is a private venture and in order for capital to be allocated and the resources cobbled together from architects and planners to skilled workers and designers, the process must yield profits. If housing doesn’t provide the required profits, the owners of capital will find somewhere else to put it. They do not produce for social need, they produce for personal enrichment; we all know that really and we will never fully resolve this or any other market driven problems until the wealth of society that is a collective product, is collectively owned and collectively allocated in a rationally planned way.
I certainly don’t have all the answers in the immediate. I am sure that there are many people, activists in housing struggles that have ideas about how we can make some changes within the framework of capitalism. We can expand the public sector and direct funds to build houses at affordable prices. Society can provide millions of decent apartments and any serious infrastructure plan would allocate money for that. The trade union apprentice schools can expand their trainings and millions of young workers can learn the skills society needs to improve living conditions for all.
The money is there, the obstacle is the private sector, the finance industry, the tech billionaires and the two capitalist parties that have a dictatorship over US political and economic life. This dictatorship and the refusal of the trade union hierarchy to build an alternative, is one of the reasons a degenerate like Trump was elected. Fortunately, this era of two -party domination is coming to an end.
So one important step in that direction is building an independent party of working people based on our organizations in the workplaces, the unions, and also our communities. Housing can just as easily be a public venture like the capitalist’s wars.
Municipal bodies are dominated by landlords and big business. What we build how we build it and when, is all based on how it best serves business and profit making. Building independent working class structures to the present political bodies and linking them locally, nationally and from there internationally, would be a positive step in the right direction.
As things stand, having owning a home is an important aspect of US life. But so were large cars. Americans used to laugh at us back home because our cars were so tiny by comparison. But economic necessity changes minds. Most people would be happy with a decent apartment. The state can provide the resources, employ the labor power and can even offer a selection of three or four styles just like the private builders do, the main thing is it would be subsidized, after all, we subsidize wars and all the other ventures the super-rich initiate like Elon Musk’s space game. He never earned the money he wastes in projects of personal gratification. As a white South African, he has had a very privileged existence, never had to do any hard work and his family’s wealth was robbed from the Black South African working class.
I cannot help wondering to myself when the US working class will put a stop to this abuse by US capitalists. When will we cease falling for the same old propaganda that the world hates us that the Iranians are on the verge of destroying our way of life (now Washington’s old friend Saddam Hussein has gone) and that economic refugees coming in to the country from our southern border are our enemies, are the cause of our misfortunes and declining living standards. These immigrants are a by-product of US imperialism’s intervention in Mexico and Central America. NAFTA alone drove millions of Mexican farmers from their land and their means of subsistence. People do not leave their homes because they don’t like where their roots are. The reason there are so many people in the US with Irish names is they were fleeing the same horrors that Mexicans and Central Americans are.
There is a great US union slogan, “An Injury to one is an injury to all.” It refers to workers of all types and countries. It is not workers from other countries that are the cause of the housing, transportation, health crisis or any other problems we face here in the US. We don’t have to look far to see who’s ripping us off. We simply have to get up and stop the damn music from playing. Elon Musk, Chuck Prince, and the other coupon clippers like them won’t be dancing then.
* Big Firms Crowd in to Market For Houses, Driving Up Prices WSJ 4-5-21
great post ... it really disgusts me that this is the country i was born into and quite honestly i feel quite hopeless ... but everything you've written is true
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment. Are you in the US by any chance? I can be contacted through the e mail on the blog if you would be interested. The e mail is: we_know_whats_up@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteI will respond with my home e mail. Thanks for taking the time to comment.