How to make a free market a tool of oppression
I just got notice that my landlord is raising my rent by $500 (after a $130 increase just this February, and an increase every year since my lease expired and he refused to renew it). Interestingly, this is above market value for what the building offers. This is an increase well in excess of 25%. There is no logical way to justify the price, and it’s called “rent gouging.”
It is also 100% legal in California, given the building was built later than 1978 (otherwise rent control limits increases to 4-5% per annum). Now I finally understand why dozens of older buildings in my neighborhood have been demolished in the past few years, only to have new apartment buildings constructed in their place: you make up the enormous cost of construction pretty quickly by skirting laws that regulate what you can charge for rent.
“Oh,” you say, “but the free market balances. Supply and demand! It’s only fair!”
Not so much when the item being sold is a life necessity. If I feel a Wii system is overpriced, I can shop for a bargain, buy it used, or not buy it at all, and I’ll live. With housing, frugalities eventually become dangerous as you chase affordable living into dangerous areas and dilapidated buildings that qualify as “slums.” And even in those conditions, you remain at the mercy of a landlord who legally has the right to charge you anything he wants.
I mentioned that this increase puts my building above its market value. By that I mean: for what he intends to charge, I could get any of a dozen nearby buildings that have far better amenities. He’s totally outclassed in this new price range. While lots of apartments in L.A. are suddenly raising rents by $100, he’s going for this insane amount, and why? Obviously, I don’t know, but I’m guessing he’s gambling that other owners will look at his prices and bump theirs up accordingly. After all, that’s what they normally do.
Because the suppliers only look at each other for their cues. The demanders don’t even enter the equation. And that’s how you get an entire housing market that is “overvalued”. Suppliers looking at their costs, and passing on the costs of fixing their stupid mistakes (ARM mortgages, anyone?) onto the demand side rather than having to sell or let the bank foreclose. If they built Playstations that weren’t worth what they charge, people would stop buying. But with an essential like housing, there’s infinite room for “whoops” on the supply side - it can always be passed onto the demand side.
Think about it: how do you get “overvalue” in a free market? How can all housing be getting sold at prices above its value, if the market works like its average proponent claims? Answer: it doesn’t work the way people want to believe. Not on necessities.
“But shoes are necessities,” you muse. “Why are there always cheap, affordable shoes available in Los Angeles, but not cheap, affordable housing?”
Because shoes are portable. I can order them from another country, if no store will sell what I want at a price I find acceptable. Even life-saving medicines can sometimes be bought on the cheap from elsewhere. But housing is part of the landscape. It’s tied to our jobs, which also aren’t portable. It’s tied to our kids’ schools, which represent their chance of future economic success. It’s tied into everything we need to survive, and that makes it infinitely exploitable - but only from the supply side.
My situation is atypical. What we’re seeing right now in L.A. is a lot of buildings raising rents by $1-200/month. Because they’re all doing it at once, of course the market will bear it: the demanders have no cheaper options. But why did they start raising the rents? Did the demand side do something to trigger it? No.
- A lot of landlords have those insane mortgages because they opted to tear down old buildings in the past 5 years and put up new ones to avoid that 1978 cut-off date. While individuals who took out those mortgages are losing their homes, landlords just pass on their huge business mistakes to the demand side. There’s infinite room for stupid on the supply side when it comes to housing.
- Unavoidable costs for things like water and electricity are also going up - there, I don’t have a problem with landlords raising rents, as the retail cost is still based on the wholesale cost. Unfortunately, I’ve never seen rents go down when the cost of water or electricity does, which bears examination.
Regulate the market just a little, and profits can still be thrilling without individuals being at the mercy of a subtle version of price fixing.
If anyone’s concerned about me, I’m lucky. My friends who’ve recently had $100 increases in rent are unable to find cheaper housing anywhere nearby, and either have to start paying more or commuting further (taking more time from families, spending more on gas, releasing more gas waste into the atmosphere, having less time for exercise and healthy cooking). Because my building was already overpriced, this was just the kick I needed to go hunt down something significantly cheaper so I have that much more savings per month to throw into my downpayment fund. I intend to buy a house in a couple of years, when the market is at its bottom and housing is actually something like its real market value.
But for those who got drummed out of the housing industry a long time ago - those homeless people who live on all our streets here - that option isn’t available. While some of them may have made bad choices that caused them to end up homeless, the hard reality is: it could happen to anyone in this town. And once you lose your home - even a rented home that was never really “yours” - you lose that address you need to put on a job application. You lose a place to receive mail and communications. You lose touch with the entire world.
All because in a country that could easily provide modest living arrangements for everyone, it is so much more important to have a race to see just how much profit can possibly be made. Isn’t it ever enough?

Nenena on 01 May 2008 at 5:16 pm #
Wow, thanks for writing this. I’m living abroad right now but will have to return to the States next year, and finding affordable housing is the one thing that I’m *most* nervous about. Thanks for breaking down all of the issues involved, it helps me understand what’s going on a lot better.
Jennifer Kesler on 02 May 2008 at 10:11 am #
I’m no expert, so that it all for what it’s worth. I think here in L.A. the cost of housing is going to continue to decline through 2010. As it becomes affordable enough for people to buy again, the rents should come down.
Experts can’t predict what’ll happen, so it’s all a guess. But it seems to me things have been SO above market value for so long, we’re bound to have an “overcorrection” during which things may actually fall below market value. Which will be both a renters’ and buyers’ market.
Blanche Debris on 06 May 2008 at 3:25 pm #
Hey, I stumbled across your blog while looking up stuff on “white trash” and privilege. Nice stuff here. Most bloggers who discuss privilege throw in too much academic jargon for my taste, your style seems to be more direct and to the point.
And yes, I agree, the housing market was overpriced, and that’s why home prices are dropping — to correct itself. This is bad for people who are unable to sell their homes right now, b/c they’ve taken out home equity loans, and their equity has evaporated due to homes declining in value. So, they’re upside down in their mortgages, and if they sold their houses for what they’re currently worth, they’d take massive financial hits (to the tune of maybe $50K or more in some cases). As far as rents rising, your rent hike sounds a bit extreme, but we’re seeing inflation everywhere now.
I blogged awhile back about some forms of privilege I have witnessed/experienced myself, if you’d like to take a look … Mentally stable privilege is there, as well as non-Southern privilege and pretty privilege … It’s *not* very fleshed out, but the points are there …
http://debrisblanche.blogspot.com/2007/12/other-kinds-of-privilege.html
Blanche Debris on 06 May 2008 at 4:00 pm #
And, oh, I think the market is *still* somewhat overpriced. Here in my city of Atlanta, upper-middle-class whites have been moving into the “slums” for cheaper housing prices and shorter commutes, thereby gentrifying them and making rents rise, causing much uproar among advocates for the poor when the rents for the poor increase and *they* can no longer afford to live there. It’s kind of a damned-if-you-do-or-don’t scenario.
Here’s a couple of interesting sites on the topic …
http://www.angryrenters.com/
http://www.writingshop.ws/html/perfect_storm.html
Jennifer Kesler on 06 May 2008 at 9:29 pm #
So, they’re upside down in their mortgages, and if they sold their houses for what they’re currently worth, they’d take massive financial hits (to the tune of maybe $50K or more in some cases).
Back in the mid-90’s, I knew a woman who took a loss of $100k on a house here, and I’m not sure she was that unusual. At the risk of sounding callous to homeowners, I’m hopeful we’ll see corrections like that again soon - not because I want homeowners to suffer, but because in a market that goes so insanely up and down as L.A. does instead of regulating for steady growth, that’s the only chance in hell for people like me to get in the game.
Gentrification is so frustrating. I think it COULD be done in a way that would be a win-win for everyone, but it always seems to shaft the poor.
I followed your link back to your blog and commented more there. Forgot to mention HELL YEAH on the whole Southern accent thing. I grew up in the South among a lot of nasty rednecks (East TN) and I hated them and couldn’t wait to leave. But I sure came away with an awareness of just how casually our whole culture dismisses people just because something marks them as “Southern” - they’re sort of objectified, like the weird relative in the attic everyone chuckles uncomfortably about. And that’s not fair because there’s as much variety and potential among Southerners as any other slice of humanity.