Saturday, August 29, 2020

Trump's Wrong Decisions Are Bringing On A Depression

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Trump claims he inherited a lousy economy from Obama and made it the best economy in the world. That's a double lie-- Trump inherited a very decent economy from Obama and it kept improving until Trump tried skewering it further for the rich at the expense of the working poor-- and by the time Trump made every wrong decision about confronting the pandemic, a recession was baked into the cake. Will voters understand this? Probably enough of them will.

I guess you know there are two economies right now-- one for the labor force that's in a deep recession, likely a depression, and one the management class and people living on passive income-- wealthier people-- that just keeps growing, thanks to the Fed pumping money into the financial markets and to their unlimited ability to print money. Yesterday Wall Street soared again-- up xx points. No one ever mentions that only 5 stocks on the S&P 500 are doing all the work and the other 495 stocks are all down by an average of 3%. (Pam and Russ Martens at Wall Street on Parade added another unsettling aspect yesterday: An Unprecedented 1,640 CEOs Departed in 2019; Now Execs Are Dumping Stock at Highest Pace Since 2006. "The number of CEOs that did not leave on their own accord last year was 101 out of the 1,640," they reported. "According to the study, 15 CEOs left over allegations of professional misconduct; 20 left amid a scandal, 'typically under investigations for financial wrongdoing or other legal issues'; 24 saw their positions terminated; 39 left due to a merger or acquisition; 3 left due to bankruptcy... When an outsized number of CEOs decide to cash out their stock options, grab their golden parachutes, and flee their corner offices-- something smells. On top of that fishy smell comes a report from TrimTabs Investment Research that corporate insiders have reaped more than $50 billion in stock sales since May, putting insider selling on a pace not seen since 2006-- two years before the stock market and economic crash of 2008.)

A blunter instrument for measuring the economy are unemployment and eviction statistics, Yesterday the Department of Labor reported that another million American workers filed for first-time unemployment benefits last week. There are now around 27 million Americans getting some kind of jobless assistance. With the GOP blocking the $600 supplemental claim for unemployed workers, the economy is going to soon start feeling billions dollars light-- unless more workers are forced back into COVID-unsafe jobs, which is exactly what the GOP is hoping for by denying the benefits.




The Aspen Institute reported earlier in the month on the COVID-19 Eviction Crisis, which has between 30 and 40 million American renters at risk of eviction. A team of reporters wrote that the U.S. "may be facing the most severe housing crisis in its history. According to the latest analysis of weekly US Census data, as federal, state, and local protections and resources expire and in the absence of robust and swift intervention, an estimated 30–40 million people in America could be at risk of eviction in the next several months. Many property owners, who lack the credit or financial ability to cover rental payment arrears, will struggle to pay their mortgages and property taxes and maintain properties. The COVID-19 housing crisis has sharply increased the risk of foreclosure and bankruptcy, especially among small property owners; long-term harm to renter families and individuals; disruption of the affordable housing market; and destabilization of communities across the United States."




This chart shows eviction risk by state. Risks are lowest in Vermont and highest in states filled with morons who keep voting for politicians who bring them hardships, fools living in deep red Mississippi, Louisiana, South Carolina, Oklahoma and Tennessee.
Significant loss of rental income during the COVID-19 pandemic creates financial peril and hardship for renters, small property owners, and communities. Without rental income, many landlords may struggle to pay mortgages and risk foreclosure and bankruptcy. The National Consumer Law Center predicts that 3 million homeowners, or roughly 5%, will have significantly delinquent mortgages by early 2021. Currently, 44% of single-family rentals have a mortgage or some similar debt. Sixty-five percent of properties with 2 to 4 units and 61% of properties with 5 to 19 units have a mortgage. Foreclosure can lead to a lack of maintenance, urban blight, reduced property values for neighboring properties, and erosion of neighborhood safety and stability. Without rental income to pay property tax, communities lose resources for public services, city and state governments, schools, and infrastructure, and can expend significant resources managing or disposing of properties acquired through tax foreclosure.

The impact of an eviction on families and individuals is even greater. Following eviction, a person’s likelihood of experiencing homelessness increases, mental and physical health are diminished, and the probability of obtaining employment declines. Eviction is linked to numerous poor health outcomes, including depression, suicide, and anxiety, among others. Eviction is also linked with respiratory disease, which could increase the risk of complications if COVID-19 is contracted, as well as mortality risk during COVID-19. Eviction makes it more expensive and more difficult for tenants who have been evicted to rent safe and decent housing, apply for credit, borrow money, or purchase a home. Instability, like eviction, is particularly damaging to children, who suffer in ways that impact their educational development and well-being for years.

The public costs of eviction are far-reaching. Individuals experiencing displacement due to eviction are more likely to need emergency shelter and re-housing, use in-patient and emergency medical services, require child welfare services, and experience the criminal legal system, among other harms.

The eviction crisis and its devastating outcomes are entirely preventable. Policy interventions at the national, state, and local levels could avoid many of the devastating costs outlined above... [W]ithout federal financial assistance, any intervention will be a stopgap at best and may fail to prevent the eviction crisis and its collateral harm.

The most comprehensive policy proposals include a nationwide moratorium on evictions and at least $100 billion in emergency rental assistance. Combining this assistance with an extension of federally enhanced unemployment insurance for displaced workers would provide additional relief for renters. Responses like these could neutralize the eviction risk outlined in this report, eliminating the public and private costs of mass evictions that result from the pandemic. More importantly, they could prevent millions of people in America from experiencing unfathomable hardship in the months and years ahead. These solutions have passed the US House of Representatives two times, and have companion legislation in the Senate.

Similarly, studies have shown a civil right to counsel in eviction cases can deliver significant benefits for tenants and landlords. While exact figures vary by jurisdiction, tenants with counsel experience improved housing stability-- often by remaining in their home, but alternatively by obtaining additional time to relocate, avoiding a formal eviction on their record, and accessing emergency rental assistance or subsidized housing.  Representation also leads to lower default rates and more fairly negotiated resolutions with landlords that limit disruption from displacement and ensure the rights of all parties are exercised. Other policies, such as eviction record sealing and restrictions that preclude property owners from basing tenant eligibility on eviction records, can prevent the longer-term harm that comes from eviction.

Given the incredibly high cost of evictions to renters, landlords, and communities, a wide range of policy interventions would provide significant cost avoidance for state and local government across the US.





Writing for Bloomberg News yesterday, Noah Buhayar, asked half a dozen key questions about evictions and attempted to answer them as the country hurtles towards an eviction crisis of historic proportions.

1- How many people could face eviction?

He comes up with 30 million, citing that same Aspen report but acknowledges it could be more like 40 million. Absent significant federal help that the GOP is absolutely unwilling to provide, the country "is heading for a massive wave of housing displacement and insecurity. More people will double up with family or end up homeless."

2. Will this all happen at once?

He doesn't think so and wrote that "It may take a few months for evictions to ramp up... The federal moratorium expired on July 24, and landlords had 30 days to notify tenants if they wanted to evict them, meaning Aug. 24 was the earliest date at which the floodgates could open. As of the end of July, 30 states lacked state-level protections against eviction during the pandemic. But even in states where there are bans, they do little to clear people’s debts. Many now owe so much in back rent that they won’t be able to catch up, pushing landlords to evict them when restrictions lift.

3. What's bring done to avert this?

Trump's lame and pointless attempt to show he cares earlier this month "didn’t authorize any specific action. Real relief would have to come from Congress, and that means money-- lots of it. House Democrats have passed a plan that would provide $100 billion in rental assistance and ban evictions" but Republicans are eager to show the working class they are the party of cruelty and refuse to be anything at all.

4- Why would a landlord evict someone at a time of high unemployment?

"Landlords," he reminded his readers, "need to collect rent to cover their expenses, including mortgage payments and property taxes. Many also pay for utilities. Keeping non-paying tenants around can incur operating costs without generating any revenue. Property owners also worry that letting a renter live in a unit for free or reduced rent could encourage other tenants in a building to withhold some of their payments. Landlords may also be betting that they can fill empty units. Going into the pandemic, there was a severe shortage of affordable rental housing across the U.S. that was driving up rents faster than incomes. Vacancy rates were at decades-long lows.

5- Who gets hurt?

As usual, Blacks and Latinos much more than white people.

6- Is this a U.S.-only problem?

It isn't but most governments are handling it much better than Trump. Big surprise!

An aside: according to Nielsen's ratings, 14.1 million people watched Trump's lies-filled screed Thursday night, quite a few less than the 17.5 million who had watched Biden's the week before. Trump's 3 biggest markets were West Palm Beach, Memphis and Nashville. Biden's had been New York City, San Francisco and West Palm. (More people watched Biden than Trump in West Palm.)
Wrapped In His Flag And Carrying A Cross... by Nancy Ohanian

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4 Comments:

At 9:16 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

wrt evictions, focus on trump and the Nazis indifference. it's valid.

but wrt the 2008 housing crash, know that 11 million lost jobs and 10 million families lost homes... and obamanation and the democraps were, if anything, MORE indifferent. They allowed those millions of foreclosures, probably most of them ILLEGAL (in fact, under challenges from some, states like Fl had to pass laws that made it illegal to question bank documentation that lied about who actually owned the notes being enforced; see also: mnuchin foreclosure fraud for which AG kamala harris did jack shit).

So, the sheepdog wants you to infer that electing biden and democraps will mean the coming eviction crisis and concurrent depression will be fixed. If you believe it, you deserve what you shall inevitably get.

money = landlords and renters = indentured servants in this shithole

and the democraps are devoted servants of the money.

this election won't do one goddamn thing to help.

 
At 9:27 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

all of trump/Nazi's wrong decisions are welcomed and aided by pelo$i and democraps. They need to run against this level of shit show in order to win, and they know it.

 
At 11:34 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

There are no more honest elections. Big Money liked Trump enough to allow him to run again while doing all possible to prevent an honest election. His opponent is little different in demeanor, racist tendencies, and his toadying to Big Money. Never once do the real issues get addressed, instead we're offered empty platitudes, false images, and empty promises that things will improve.

Some of us heard "nothing will fundamentally change" and believe this to be the only campaign plank which isn't rotten in texture.

 
At 11:59 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Now We Know We Can't Expect The Military To Act When Trump Declares He's Staying In Office

Joe Biden, the Democrat nominee, has said he fears Mr Trump will try to "steal" the election but the military would "escort him from the White House with great dispatch."

In a letter to Congress, Mark Milley, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he did not envisage soldiers playing any role if Republicans and Democrats did not agree on the result.

Looks like that extra money the Democrats gave to the Pentagon was wasted.

 

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