The Homeownership Society Was a Mistake
Real estate should be treated as consumption, not investment.
www.theatlantic.com
theres a quote either Putin or some other russian leader said and I can't find it: essentially they didn't understand the American economy being based on people buying and selling each others homesThe title is a complete misnomer because we don't live in a "homeownership society". This is like saying "integrating schools was a mistake" in the 1940s, or "universal public health care was a mistake", umm, right now.
A better title would have been "real estate speculation was a mistake". Because virtually the entire article is focused on issues caused by speculators, unpredictability in the housing market, and the political power of rich homeowners/speculators who want home prices to go up at the expense of everyone else who doesn't own yet. It's criticizing homeownership as an investment, not homeownership as a value in life.
There some some large red herrings in the article like, "the stock market has outperformed real estate", which commits the fallacy of assuming that poor/working/middle class families get to choose between $1500/month to pay off a mortgage and $1500/month to put into stocks. Sorry, but if they don't have a mortgage, then they're putting that money into RENT, not stocks, and the only people who get to profit off of it are their landlords. For a single-family homeowner, at best only a minority % of their mortgage payment can be diverted into stocks instead, and if you refigured the comparison to that reality (homeownership vs. rent losses + stock gains), suddenly the rent/stock side isn't looking so hot for the average American.
Owning the place you live should be as much of a right as public education and health care. If we tailored policy to trying to ensure that everyone can afford to own where they live without being in severe fiscal danger, rather than tailoring policy to wealthy people increasing their property values and speculators getting a good return on investment, we would be a much better society. Instead we're stuck in this pseudo-feudal bullshyt where the rich profit off of the poor on a monthly basis solely because the poor can't afford to hold property.
Yeah, I'm really not that invested in what country a thinks when that county still had serfdom until their revolution
While I agree that Russian opinions on US policy are generally unconvincing, it's worth pointing out that we ourselves had sharecropping until the 1950s.
(edit - I know little of Russian history but wikipedia says that serfdom was abolished in Russia in 1861, practically the same time slavery was abolished in USA. Though I wouldn't be surprised it, like in the USA, it persisted for a time in other forms and the end of serdom wouldn't have resulted in anything like labor equality.