• ninjan@lemmy.mildgrim.com
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    10 months ago

    Sure but from my understanding the problem in the US (and most places) isn’t that there isn’t room. The sum of empty houses/apartments is greater than the amount of homeless. It’s more distribution and logistics.

    So we drop demand by outlawing many forms of ownership but with lower prices from that drop its reasonable to expect an increase in demand for the most popular places / places with a good salary and strong job market.

    This then naturally moves the spot with available homes further from the major areas. People with low/no means are they then expected to move there to not be homeless? Even if there’s no career prospects or even jobs?

    If we cap relocation how is that handled? Are you not allowed to move into and buy a new home in say San Francisco, LA or NY?

    And how much relocation are we mandating for the homeless?

    If we remove the free market there is an extreme demand for very thoughtful, planned out rules which need to be airtight because people exploit everything and every loophole will be found.

    And if we don’t eliminate the free market, just limit who can own, then how do we avoid the aforementioned problems of accelerating urbanization? Such that we don’t equalize at the exact same prices just private owned instead of corporate owned.