I see this argument a lot about how bad it is to be stuck and I really can't wrap my head around how its presented. Laid bare its "you've been underpaying so long you won't be able to afford overpaying."
If the landlord suddenly demands double the rent and you don't have rent control, and everywhere else in town demands double the rent, you are homeless. If you have rent control, your landlord cannot double your rent, but it still goes up at a fixed % a year, and you aren't gonna go homeless.
Housing prices have rose faster than wages can keep up, either you offer some limits at how much you can gouge from a tenant or you accept the consequences of low income workers forced to live far from their low wage job (increased vehicle usage due to being far from convenient transit, more congestion on the roads, more pollution in the city), as there's just not enough jobs in these far flung areas.
The great irony is that all of these debates and issues and perilous environmental and economic situations could all be avoided if we simply built dense supply to match demand. This is the U.S., we do nothing better than create heaps of supply to exceed demand. Distal suburbs hastily constructed in wildfire lands aren't the answer; you have to build housing where you've built the jobs. That means building UP so people don't have to travel for hours and hours sideways to find something they can live in with their wages.
If the landlord suddenly demands double the rent and you don't have rent control, and everywhere else in town demands double the rent, you are homeless. If you have rent control, your landlord cannot double your rent, but it still goes up at a fixed % a year, and you aren't gonna go homeless.
Housing prices have rose faster than wages can keep up, either you offer some limits at how much you can gouge from a tenant or you accept the consequences of low income workers forced to live far from their low wage job (increased vehicle usage due to being far from convenient transit, more congestion on the roads, more pollution in the city), as there's just not enough jobs in these far flung areas.
The great irony is that all of these debates and issues and perilous environmental and economic situations could all be avoided if we simply built dense supply to match demand. This is the U.S., we do nothing better than create heaps of supply to exceed demand. Distal suburbs hastily constructed in wildfire lands aren't the answer; you have to build housing where you've built the jobs. That means building UP so people don't have to travel for hours and hours sideways to find something they can live in with their wages.