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1. I own a 4 unit building on a decent sized lot in a big city. 2. I make housing available to 3 other families This is the point - the second sentence does not actually follow from the first. The person who built the building, either the actual builders or the investors, make it available. At this point, it is a normal service-provision kind of relationship you see across the economy. Except, with landlords, it isn't that they provide the building. It's that they provide the land. The land is parcelled out in a manner which, at best could be compared to if we just gave rights to parts of the electromagnetic spectrum to whichever radio stations started pumping waves into it first. Of course, in reality, land ownership is usually rooted in much more brutal and sordid stories in America. So you essentially end up with a class of people who take no risks, provide no service, and add no value, employ nobody, and often literally do nothing. |
The person who owns the land makes it available by deciding to rent to people. The person who owns the land can decide to tear it down or not rent to people.
>take no risks
Real estate is not a risk free investment. It would be much more popular than bonds (when interest rates aren't near zero) if it was.
>provide no service
Maintaining the property in a habitable condition is a service. Maintenance expenses are why a large number of people choose to rent instead of buy when staying somewhere short term.
>add no value
Making housing available in desirable locations for less than the cost of a SFH is adding value. It can reduce people's commute or put them in neighborhoods they want to live in. If that land was instead covered in SFHs (which seems to be the implied ideal for the "landlords should not exist" crowd) the number of people who could live there would be significantly reduced.
>employ nobody
Landscapers, plumbers, electricians, roofers, property managers, cleaners, inspectors. In the case of new construction, a lot more people.
>often literally do nothing
Ha. I wish.