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Why not be a food owner?


               
2014 May 6, 11:45am   3,920 views  17 comments

by Heraclitusstudent   follow (8)  

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/06/upshot/everyone-wants-to-be-a-homeowner-why-not-a-foodowner.html?ref=economy
Foodowners would eagerly support government policies that restrict the production of food because that would push up prices. And they might reap windfalls from rising prices without selling their contracts: They could refinance, cashing out the equity in their appreciated food contracts to spend on caviar and crême brùlée contracts, or on nonfood items.

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Good to see an article pointing out the insanity going on with housing...

#housing

Comments 1 - 17 of 17        Search these comments

1   Reality   2014 May 6, 2:26pm  

Don't they already do that via government subsidies to not-produce, and FDA restrictions on all sorts of food and drugs?

2   Bellingham Bill   2014 May 6, 2:31pm  

"which is why I got on my soapbox recently on MSNBC to urge people to rent their homes, and start viewing housing as a consumption good, like food."

ugh.

I can't see the future but if wages go up, rents will go up.

Whether wages will go up is the interesting question, but I don't see why not, even though what happened 1970-2000 isn't necessarily going to happen anytime soon.

Buying your own house does have the salutary benefit of allowing one to step off the rental treadmill, of paying the LL's mortgage for him.

Gen Y is beginning to turn 30, and they're going to need housing. I don't think we're going to be over-supplied in housing anytime soon for that matter.

3   mmmarvel   2014 May 7, 12:03am  

Bellingham Bill says

I don't think we're going to be over-supplied in housing anytime soon for that
matter.

On the one hand I agree. And then I look in my local neighborhood where there are not that many homes for sale and I see four homes which (it appears) the occupants/owners were evicted and there they sit, no for sale signs, pretty much NOTHING. In one case it has been three years (although whoever is holding paper on it has contracted to have the yard mowed and the house looked at to ensure no break ins). In the other three cases, only one has been listed at all, the other two range from 3 to 6 months of no occupants. They are pretty nice homes, priced right, they should move; just don't understand it.

4   HomelessJoe   2014 May 7, 2:58am  

Wages are not going anywhere at all anytime soon at all. Welcome to the new normal, peons.

The rental treadmill is no worse (and probably much better) than the DEBT-treadmill. But his real point is that people should think of houses for what they are (goods) and not what people want them to be (investments).

5   Rin   2014 May 7, 3:59am  

Bellingham Bill says

Gen Y is beginning to turn 30, and they're going to need housing.

Gen Y will be living in their parent's basements for a long time.

I've never seen a poorer generation in a long time, sans those with a silver spoon.

6   dublin hillz   2014 May 7, 4:07am  

Rin says

Bellingham Bill says



Gen Y is beginning to turn 30, and they're going to need housing.


Gen Y will be living in their parent's basements for a long time.


I've never seen a poorer generation in a long time, sans those with a silver spoon.

Which may lead to them inheriting the house once boomer parents die so essentially they will have very low lifetime housing costs by living rent free until that happens. Now if they will not be able to handle property taxes/maintenance after the fact then they truly deserve foreclosure like in the movie "House of sand and fog."

7   Rin   2014 May 7, 5:35am  

dublin hillz says

Now if they will not be able to handle property taxes/maintenance after the fact then they truly deserve foreclosure like in the movie "House of sand and fog."

After some 30 years, some of these newer houses will need up to $50K worth of renovation. For a bunch of millennial bozos, who'd never been able to get a real job, it's highly unlikely that they'll be able to maintain the place w/o subletting some of the rooms.

Since today, there are millions of boomerang kids, that could be a demographic effect, in itself. Basically, we're talking about a massive airbnb phenomena.

8   edvard2   2014 May 7, 7:00am  

I own a bunch of food in my fridge. I'm rich I tell ya.... rich!!!

9   edvard2   2014 May 7, 7:01am  

Rin says

For a bunch of millennial bozos, who'd never been able to get a real job, it's highly unlikely that they'll be able to maintain the place w/o subletting some of the rooms.

Lazy Young-ins!!
-circa 1929, 1999, 2009, 2014...

10   Heraclitusstudent   2014 May 7, 7:27am  

dublin hillz says

Which may lead to them inheriting the house once boomer parents die

That may be a long time to wait in the basement.
Look at Prince Charles.

11   Bellingham Bill   2014 May 7, 12:29pm  

HomelessJoe says

But his real point is that people should think of houses for what they are (goods)

thing is, real estate is both the depreciating fixed improvement and the bundle of land use rights for the lot.

And thanks to inflation even the "depreciating" sticks and bricks can be worth more now than at time of construction, even with minimal maintenance.

A total crap modular home costs $40,000, easily. My mom's place wasn't much more than that when just-built new in the 1970s.

https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/CUUR0000SEHA

brutal

12   lostand confused   2014 May 7, 12:45pm  

I hear homes in TX have rocketed up the past year so. is this true?

13   rufita11   2014 May 8, 2:42am  

Rin says

Gen Y will be living in their parent's basements for a long time.

My husband was Skyping with a fellow musician from NYC and saw the guy's mom walk by and heard her tell him to stop playing guitar. This guy is 43!!!! How pathetic is that?! Just so sad that a man can't even afford rent in the city because it's so dang high. My own older brother works full time and is trying to get a small biz off the ground--he rents my parent's cottage for 1/5 market value.

14   Heraclitusstudent   2014 May 8, 2:47am  

Bellingham Bill says

And thanks to inflation even the "depreciating" sticks and bricks can be worth more now than at time of construction, even with minimal maintenance.

Thanks to inflation?
Do you really expect inflation to preserve value?

15   FunTime   2014 May 9, 8:25am  

Bellingham Bill says

I can't see the future but if wages go up

Wow, they better go up like a rocket.

16   FunTime   2014 May 9, 8:27am  

mmmarvel says

They are pretty nice homes, priced right, they should move; just don't understand it.

Or you do understand it because you wrote, "Priced right."

17   FortWayne   2014 May 9, 9:40am  

rufita11 says

Rin says

Gen Y will be living in their parent's basements for a long time.

My husband was Skyping with a fellow musician from NYC and saw the guy's mom walk by and heard her tell him to stop playing guitar. This guy is 43!!!! How pathetic is that?! Just so sad that a man can't even afford rent in the city because it's so dang high. My own older brother works full time and is trying to get a small biz off the ground--he rents my parent's cottage for 1/5 market value.

It really is a mess what we have in a housing market today.

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