| > Second, the US has a lower incidence of homeless people than many countries with much more generous social programs US have 17/100k of population, Italy has 8. We are not famous for being big on personal responsibility. > Japanese homeless are very very homeless They are 0.3/100k of population though or roughly 56 times less than US. At that level the problem is solved, not completely, but at least the number the country has to deal with is manageable. If US had the same share of homeless people of Italy (and they could do muuuuuuch better than us) they would have half of the homeless population. Which is a radical improvement if you ask me. > Third, the homeless rate in the US has been on the decline for decades. Is it? According to the stats it increased from 2018 onwards from previous years https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/09/18/surprisin... |
I didn't say we were the best, just that we are doing better than some who are throwing much more money at the problem. So money obviously isn't the issue.
>They are 0.3/100k of population though or roughly 56 times less than US. >At that level the problem is solved, not completely, but at least the number the country has to deal with is manageable. >If US had the same share of homeless people of Italy (and they could do muuuuuuch better than us) they would have half of the homeless population. >Which is a radical improvement if you ask me.
Yeah, again, the US isn't the best. You can find many countries with lower homeless rates. We can do better. The countries with the best rates can do better. So what? Japan has one of the highest suicide rates in the world. Italy has double the unemployment of the rest of the EU average. "Do what they do" is obviously not good advice in a general sense. Homelessness is a hard problem, but San Francisco specifically is doing an awful job, even relative to the US as a whole, managing it because of local politics.
>According to the stats it increased from 2018 onwards from previous years
And I'm sure COVID-19 made things worse as well, but I said decades, not years. Years are lumpy, but the trend line at least since 2007 is very much downward.