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When governments burn the future to save the past they do it with housing
In the United States, there is a clear age gradient for voting: the young vote for the left, the old vote for the right. This is partly due to changing racial composition, but not entirely. Young whites are much more likely to vote Democrat than Republican. But in Canada, this is not the case. Here, there is almost no age gradient at all in vote intentions.
A standard model for politics is a combination of (1) people’s opinions on social issues settle fairly early in life and as Cthulhu swims leftward their views end up further and further right, and (2) as people age they become more economically secure and less and less likely to benefit from redistribution.
Canada violates this model for a few reasons. Our welfare state – which spends lavishly on the old – is the lynchpin of our nationalism: “We aren’t like those damn Americans” the Boomers cry as they hold on to their OHIP cards and wait for 8 hours in an emergency room. What it means to be a Canadian these days is to support large government and this keeps the old attached to the left. The right in Canada is also pretty neutral (neutered?) on social issues so issue #1 above is not that important – at least until abortion trots out during the election.
However, this has all be throat-clearing for my actual point. Canada now has a special issue which creates cross-cutting electoral incentives by age: housing. For decades one of Canada’s selling points has been that it’s a peaceful, moderate place that is cheap to live. That has been completely destroyed over the past decade under the leadership of the Liberal Party. The Liberals are the party of the status quo and don’t see it as a problem that prices are high. Just yesterday, Prime Minister Trudeau gave an interview where he said: “Housing needs to retain its value. It’s a huge part of people’s potential retirement and future and nest egg. So yes, we need to keep housing stable and valuable”. On the policy front and despite high interest rates, the government is letting people pull money out of RRSPs (equivalent of 401ks) for downpayments, instructing the Bank of Canada (equivalent of the Fed) to buy mortgage-backed securities to make borrowing cheaper, and creating new tax vehicles for home buyers. Despite promising to lower net migration, the stats show that a record 400,000 people arrived in the first three months of 2024.
In other words, the Canadian left (the lefty NDP party is in coalition with the Liberals) is spending more and more tax money to prop up home equity and price its young people out of homes on purpose. In Canada the institutional left sees its role as protecting middle class wealth. High house prices have existed in our big cities for decades and prompted a steady stream of Canadian outmigration to cheaper places. Cities kept growing because of replacement immigration. In 2020 however due to the pandemic and a surge of workers and student immigration to rural areas, unaffordability has spread nationwide and now literally nowhere is spared. Houses in small towns hours away from major cities generally cost over $400k. This has caused a deep well of anger and despair among the young. It shows up in polling to some extent, but anecdotally: one of my friends just moved to Colombia to become a remote worker … because of housing, another one abandoned trying to get pregnant … because of housing. A friend circle I’m near to is fracturing because half of it inherited homes and the other half will rent forever, and that fact is too corrosive to the friendships. Its just too hard to watch your kids grow up in an apartment you can barely afford while your friends live in a better neighbourhood and go on vacations.
In a normal society, housing is not a politically important issue. Its just a good like any other. But if house prices rise as they have here, your society has made a Faustian bargain. The older generation become millionaires despite barely saving, but it comes at an enormous cost. Social cohesion frays, more and more GDP gets paid to parasites realtors, high land costs mean new building also consumes more and more GDP, without the basics covered young people wont start businesses, cost of living soars for the poor and young, governments face pressure to both get new buyers into homes and preserve home values which means wasting money and mass immigration, etc. And the lucky ones who see their asset prices rise? They aren’t always better off either! Most will see their kids move far away or borrow against their homes to give their kids downpayments. Housing in a world like this is a special issue because it is truly zero-sum: one person's cost of living is another person's asset. Depending who you are, you want prices to be higher or lower. This is a nightmare for governments because there is no easy third option: your policies will inevitably hurt one group or another on the single most important factor for their financial health.
In short, it’s a disaster. Given how far its gone, there is no way for normalcy to return with economic growth (it would take decades for real incomes to rise sufficiently) so there are only three end games: (1) Canada becomes like Southern England or San Francisco, a dual society of property owners and proles, (2) inflation re-ignites and incomes rise enough in nominal terms to re-establish affordability, or (3) the crash and ensuing recession. I don't know which of the three is my prior or even which to root for. The new political consensus is for government to respond with overwhelming force to economic downturns and do what it takes to protect assets, especially housing assets. Political forces are arrayed in pursuit of outcome #1. Its possible that inflation is re-establishing a limiting principle for how much this will work in future, but it may not and we get scenario #2. There may also be a sui generis event or a conservative ideological policy mix after the next election that causes #3.
Housing in America is cheap. America doesn't have a housing problem, it has a policing problem. Housing is cheap in America.
Fire up Redfin, and sort by low to high. You can buy a "missing middle" townhome in Philly, in a medium density neighborhood, close to mass transit, for the same price as the median new car. On the other coast, you can buy a place in Long Beach with a three digit mortgage. In the middle, there are houses that are literally free.
If you buy any of these affordable houses, you'll find yourself living next to People of Affordability. I wouldn't live in Kensington if you paid me to.
Since you can't separate yourself from criminals through law enforcement, you do so by proxy using price.
If you are a landlord or a developer, you need to price your rentals high enough that a family of fentanyl zombies plus a few hangers-on can't scrape the money together. That usually means setting your price floor at the point where two young professionals can just about pay for it, if they struggle. Price it any lower and you might get good tenants, but you'll eventually get your good tenant's dirtbag sister, and then your good tenant's dirtbag sister's baby daddy/dealer, and eventually your building gets condemned.
In the 1960s developers were building 2/1 houses with a car port, on small lots, and selling them at a profit to young middle class families. Build the same housing now, and nobody will buy them, because they know that such a neighborhood will quickly become unsafe.
If you want middle-class buyers who will make regular mortgage payments, you need to build a house big enough that the People of Affordability can't afford it, far enough from the city center social services that they don't live nearby, and far enough from mass transit that they can't get to you. Not only do you need to price out the dirtbags, you need to price out normal middle-to-working class people who might have a daughter that had a baby with a dirtbag five years ago.
The equilibrium point here is the only housing you can find in a safe neighborhood is just barely affordable for two young childless professionals or an established PMC family, and everyone else is screwed. Decent working class people with in-person jobs can either live with the underclass or commute for two hours each way, and middle-class people will take a big pay cut to work remote or in the exurbs so they can live someplace where their family will be safe.
"Housing" was never the problem in America. You can buy a cheap house. You can buy land cheaply. You can build cheaply. Outside of a handful of counties, you can even get a cheap permit. There are cheap places in the cities. There are cheap places in the inner suburbs. There are cheap places that are dense and cheap places that are open. You just don't want to live in those places because of crime.
I've seen this claim numerous times but never backed up. Are people really taking commuter rail to bedroom suburbs, committing crimes, then taking commuter rail home? It seems... Hard to believe.
I think people aren't worried about cat burglars, they're worried about vagrancy and the associated crimes that come with it. With nonexistent fare enforcement vagrants can ride just for fun, or to get out of the elements, instead of being constrained to a relatively small area.
This was a concern in my area, but the local government gave us a huge confound by opening a big no-barrier shelter in our wealthy enclave a year before the light rail was due to be completed.
Also lots of these crimes are more crimes of convenience than 'cat burglar drives 2 hours out of their way to a random middle class suburb and conducts elaborate stake-out to steal their TV'. I also genuinely believe that burglary is less lucrative than in previous eras unless you happen to land on a house where there's significant amounts of jewellery. Tech is cheap (and increasingly secured + the expensive bits are mounted flat screen TVs), people hold less cash.
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