Private Equity JACKS Up Trailer Park Rents Hurting Millions |Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar

Krystal and Saagar cover the massive increase in trailer park rents being caused by private equity entering the mobile home market leading to major issues for longtime homeowners

 

 

As a 30 year old still renting, these housing segments are always so demoralizing. I appreciate the honest reporting, don’t get me wrong. It’s just seeing the veil pulled back on all the lies I was told growing up. I always thought I’d have a house by now. I thought I’d have kids and a family of my own. These ghouls have made it unaffordable. They stole that from this and future generations and the government just stood by and let it happen. Helping, even, in some cases.

 

The first mobile home I sold as a realtor was the beginning of the year, since then, the cost of the land lease at that park has increased by about 200-300 per month. It’s not sustainable. These are our seniors, it makes me sick. This country is being ran by very indifferent, and sick individuals.
This happened to a friend of mine. She is very low income and the mobile homes in her park are literally glorified shacks. A big company bought the park and doubled the rent. Residents are moving in with each other just to make ends meet. It is criminal that big companies are gouging poverty stricken people.
I am not surprised at all. I personally know people who are experiencing this. Private equity is deadset on ensuring that no one other than them is able to own their own homes or land. If they are not already, they will be targeting RV parks next. Absolutely nowhere is safe from what can only be described as the cancerous growth that is private equity.
Rents are getting crazy. Moreover they’re now actually charging renters for things that previously were always just things the landlord just did. My friend showed me his lease, if lightbulbs in hallways go they charge $40 to replace them, if you need your toilet snaked it’s $30, and so on. I swore that those things we’re the landlord’s responsibility anyway, and in some cases they are. What they do is charge for them and if someone wants to fight it to the point that they’re willing to go to court, they might win but when the lease is up at the end of the year the “properly management” entities (ie these investment companies) will either jack up the rent or just decide not to renew it and the renter has to leave. It’s disgusting and i believe may be the proverbial Straw that breaks the camel’s back. This is unsustainable. I have two different friends that are currently living in tents. Both have jobs, they’re don’t have mental health or substance abuse issues or any other of the usual reasons that are behind being homeless; they just flat out can’t afford to rent anything that’s available. The reason that this has been on mind is because unless SOMETHING changes in my own situation, there’s a high likelihood that come this October I’ll be setting up camp right next to them.
I felt this recently. Two years ago I was priced out of a home. Then last year I started looking at a mobile or manufactured home, because it’s time I own something. Well I got priced out again and people are outbidding each other on piece of crap mobile homes going over +200k.
You can’t have the American dream. But you can rent it… For a little while.
so many of my clients are in this position. Lot rents 700-1200 just for space with extremely high criteria to meet in order to qualify. It’s so unfair for a specific portion of the population that struggles to get by

If Elizabeth Warren really wants to unrig the system, she should focus on the Dream Hoarders

Odds are that you have not been following the recent libertarian dust-up over the merits of an Elizabeth Warren presidency. To give a brief recap: The main contenders were Will Wilkinson and Jerry Taylor of the “liberaltarian” Niskanen Center, who have been Warren-friendly to varying degrees; their opponents were colleague Samuel Hammond, along with Tyler Cowen of the more traditionally libertarian Mercatus Center, who touched off the whole debate with a withering critique of Warren’s policies.

A point-by-point exploration of their arguments would exceed the space allotted for this column by several thousand inches. But I think one can sum up the libertarian approach to Warren with a single question: How big a problem do you think billionaires, and the mega-successful corporations they helm, pose to the average American? Actually, come to think of it, I think that’s about how you’d sum up the question of Warren from any angle.

Which is why this debate ultimately matters to a lot more people than just some cranky libertarians: It speaks directly to a whole lot of young people who see that the economy doesn’t work for them the way it did for their parents and grandparents, and therefore conclude that somewhere along the way, the people it is working for — the barons of finance, the giants of Silicon Valley — must have rigged the system in their favor.

To be fair, they’re not entirely wrong. As Adam Smith once wrote, “People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.” Bankers and tech executives very much included. So I find myself nodding in agreement with Wilkinson — and, by extension, with the progressive base of the Democratic Party — when he says: “Warren’s general diagnosis of the problem — it’s a rigged system of anticompetitive rent-seeking enabled by insufficiently democratic and representative political institutions — is broadly similar to my own.”

Yet they’re not entirely right, either. Are big corporations, or billionaires, or banks, or tech giants, or health insurers and pharmaceutical firms — to name some of Warren’s favorite targets — really the reason that young people are struggling

  • with enormous student loans? Are they the reason that millennial homeownership lags that of their parents? Are they the
  • reason that recent college graduates are more likely than their elders to be underemployed? Have they
  • driven the cost of health insurance to its current stratospheric levels?

Sure, Warren may be eager to sic her Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on your mortgage lender if you fall afoul of some obscure clause, but that’s not the problem for most Americans. They’re much more likely to struggle with finding affordable housing in prosperous cities. In fairness, Warren does have a plan to ease the zoning regulations that cause the shortage — but for some reason she rarely talks about it on the campaign trail, possibly because it’s constitutionally dubious, but more likely because it would alienate her affluent suburban base.

Similarly, Warren is eager to forgive student loans — a $1.6 trillion transfer to some of the most affluent members of society — but not to attack degree creep, which has walled off most of the best jobs for those who hold a bachelor of arts while enriching a lot of colleges. She targets insurers and drugmakers, but not the hospitals and medical workers who drive most of our health-care costs.

Too many of her proposals are like this; they focus on corporate villains or billionaires while ignoring the much broader class of people that Richard Reeves of the Brookings Institution dubbed the “Dream Hoardersthe well-educated upper-middle-class people who are desperate to pass their privilege onto their kids, and are unhappy about the steadily mounting cost of doing so. They’re Warren’s base.

Unfortunately, the Dream Hoarders — and I include myself in their number — are a much bigger problem for the rest of America than the billionaires whose wealth Warren promises to expropriate. Those billionaires got that way by building companies that disrupted cozy local monopolies, and they fund coding camps for high-school dropouts; Dream Hoarders

  • protect their professional licensing regimes and
  • insist on ever more extensive and expensive educations in the people they hire. Dream Hoarders also
  • pull every lever to keep their own housing prices high — and poorer kids out of their schools — while
  • using their wealth to carefully guide their children over the hurdles they’ve erected.

Which may be why the best predictor of a neighborhood with a low degree of income mobility is not the gap between the top 1 percent and everyone else — the gap that Warren focuses on with all her talk of taxing billionaires — but

If you really want to unrig the system, you need to focus less on a handful of billionaires than on the iron grip that the Dream Hoarders have on America’s most powerful institutions — including, to all appearances, Elizabeth Warren’s campaign.

People vs. Money in America’s Midterm Elections

They seek to restore access to a middle-class life by providing decent, well-paying jobs, reestablishing a sense of financial security, and ensuring access to quality education – without the chokehold of student debt that so many graduates currently face – and decent health care, regardless of pre-existing medical conditions. They call for affordable housing and a secure retirement in which the elderly are not preyed on by an avaricious financial sector. And they seek a more dynamic, competitive, and fair-market economy by curbing the excesses of market power, financialization, and globalization, and by strengthening workers’ bargaining power.

These perquisites of a middle-class life are attainable. They were affordable a half-century ago, when the country was substantially poorer than it is today; and they are affordable now. In fact, neither America’s economy nor its democracy can afford not to bolster the middle class. Government policies and programs – including public options for health insurance, supplementary retirement benefits, or mortgages – are crucial to realizing this vision.

.. In a normal democracy, these ideas would, I am confident, prevail. But US politics has been corrupted by money, gerrymandering and massive attempts at disenfranchisement. The 2017 tax bill was nothing short of a bribe to corporations and the wealthy to pour their financial resources into the 2018 election. Statistics show that money matters enormously in American politics.