Wouldn’t that be $1k a month minimum? Even if you could find housing at that price where most destitute people are located… that’s $7.8 Billion a year.
Yeah your right. That would only pay for almost three years. Honestly though $1000 may be a bit high for a room, but perhaps not an actual house depending on the area.
Putting aside your confusion on monthly versus annual rent, the pricing you are thinking of has baked in the assumption that the homeless are not participating. Every value is based on supply and demand, and there’s no such thing as a true objective numerical value for “a month of rent”. If hypothetically you have housing for a 1,000 but 1,500 people to house, then the tent is going to go up so long as 1,000 can afford what’s available, and 500 would be left out.
Of course with more incentive, construction can happen, but just saying it’s not that simple.
See also cost of college. Well intended measures to make financing available to everyone caused massive cost increases in universities. Any measure to try to secure these resources for everyone requires more than just throwing cash at the problem.
You don’t have to believe it, good lord!
650,000 homeless people times one thousand in rent for twenty years.
650000 x $1,000 x 20 years = $13 billion. That leaves enough left over to also feed them for 20 years as well
Do you believe it now!? Don’t answer that, because it is clear you have a serious case of learned helplessness.
Wouldn’t that be $1k a month minimum? Even if you could find housing at that price where most destitute people are located… that’s $7.8 Billion a year.
Yeah your right. That would only pay for almost three years. Honestly though $1000 may be a bit high for a room, but perhaps not an actual house depending on the area.
$83.33 a month for rent?
Yeah that was not right
Putting aside your confusion on monthly versus annual rent, the pricing you are thinking of has baked in the assumption that the homeless are not participating. Every value is based on supply and demand, and there’s no such thing as a true objective numerical value for “a month of rent”. If hypothetically you have housing for a 1,000 but 1,500 people to house, then the tent is going to go up so long as 1,000 can afford what’s available, and 500 would be left out.
Of course with more incentive, construction can happen, but just saying it’s not that simple.
See also cost of college. Well intended measures to make financing available to everyone caused massive cost increases in universities. Any measure to try to secure these resources for everyone requires more than just throwing cash at the problem.
Yeah my math was way off.
Putting people in tents is just ridiculous. You need to get that thought far out of your mind.
No need for construction though as there are already more empty homes than homeless by a large margin.