Wealth worsens California housing crisis; what lawmakers can do

Housing insecurity in the United States has surged in the wake of COVID-19, ongoing inflation and cost of living increases. Living in a state facing unprecedented homelessness rates, I witness the struggle for housing security daily. However, the pandemic illuminated ways to protect people from housing insecurity.

Recently, California passed the Stable Affordable Housing Act (S.B. 555), the first state social housing legislation nationwide and Senator Nancy Skinner introduced a new bill to prohibit investment entities from purchasing, acquiringor leasing a single-family home.

I’ve lived in some of the most expensive housing markets nationwide. When costs surged in Santa Cruz because of the housing bubble, and because Silicon Valley tech millionaires were snapping up vacation homes and driving up already exorbitant housing costs, I resided in a tiny apartment subsidized by the university because I couldn’t afford market-rate rent as a tenure-track professor.

During the pandemic, work brought me back to Southern California. My current income exceeds tenfold my parents’ when they bought our home, yet after 30 years of saving, homeownership remains elusive for me and countless others.

In June 2023, my family and I faced a no-fault eviction from our home. A brief analysis of our available alternatives illuminated the motive behind the property owners’ desire to displace us: They could raise our rent by 40%, forcing us to vacate. I couldn’t sleep. I was distracted from work. I explored moving to a slightly less expensive area. My daughter bristled at the possibility of changing schools for the fourth time in five years.

While some perceived my ordeal as an outcome of the principles of supply and demand, with property owners making rational choices to maximize profits, the broader housing crisis illustrates the consequences of wealth concentrated in the hands of a few. Excessive wealth exerts a disproportionate influence by extracting resources from those with little or no wealth, particularly renters, and subsequently consolidating and defending that wealth, often manipulating government processes to maintain a seemingly unchangeable system. In the housing market, excessive wealth exerts upward pressure on rents and home prices.

Private equity-backed investors initiated a surge in their acquisition of rental properties during the Great Recession, and this trend continued during the pandemic. Projections indicate that by 2030, private equity entities are expected to own a 40% share of the single-family rental market. This will exacerbate eviction rates and cost of renting homes, and demonstrateswhy Skinner’s legislation is critically important.

The excessively wealthy accrue the most substantial benefits from the housing market structure. In California, they derive the greatest advantages from Proposition 13, the 1978 ballot initiative that imposed a 2% cap on annual increases in assessed property values. Attempts to amend or overturn Proposition 13 encounter formidable resistance, particularly from the excessively wealthy.

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