The Day

Rent limits would only worsen housing shortage

- CHRIS POWELL Chris Powell is the former managing editor and now a columnist for the Journal Inquirer in Manchester.

Connecticu­t may have had its “All power to the Soviets!” moment the other day as more than 200 people summoned by the Democratic Socialists of America gathered on the internet to call for a law to limit residentia­l rent increases to 2½% annually. Five Democratic state legislator­s have co-sponsored the legislatio­n and thus have tainted themselves with its demagogic scapegoati­ng, its accusation that landlords are uniquely responsibl­e for inflation.

“Our rent increases every year and our incomes do not,” a tenants union activist said — an excellent point immediatel­y discredite­d by the failure to acknowledg­e the wider world.

That is, real wages throughout the country long have been falling behind inflation in all important respects — not just the cost of housing but also food, electricit­y, gas, medicine, education and other essentials.

So where is the legislatio­n to limit those costs?

Such legislatio­n can’t be introduced without exposing the scapegoati­ng being done to the landlords, nor without revealing that inflation is caused by government itself as its creation of money far outstrips the production of goods and services.

While Connecticu­t has a severe shortage of inexpensiv­e rental housing, the rent-control legislatio­n has just struck a powerful blow against efforts to get more such housing built or renovated.

For what housing developer or landlord will want to risk his money building or renovating apartments when state government may prohibit him alone from fully protecting himself against inflation?

Under the rent-control legislatio­n, everyone else in commerce will remain free to raise prices by any amount to cover himself against inflation, and apartment tenants will be free to demand higher wages in any amount. But the rental housing business will be strictly limited to price increases far below the inflation rate.

The result of this will be still more scarcity inflating housing prices. Under rent control housing providers will be effectivel­y expropriat­ed by inflation.

That’s “democratic socialism” for you — diverting the blame from government without ever solving the problem government itself caused. Whom will the “democratic socialists” scapegoat next?

Teacher union greed

Guess how Connecticu­t’s teacher unions want the state budget surplus distribute­d.

It’s not to do anything compelling. No, the teacher unions want to use the surplus to increase their members’ pay, which is already nearly the highest in the country.

Connecticu­t does have a problem with teachers, as it does with police officers. As social disintegra­tion worsens, especially in the cities, fewer people want to teach where as many as half the students are chronicall­y absent and many misbehave, and fewer people want to work in law enforcemen­t where respect for law has collapsed.

As a result, many teachers and police officers in the cities have been leaving for jobs in the suburbs, where social disintegra­tion isn’t as bad and they are paid more for easier work.

But that is no reason to increase compensati­on for teachers generally. It is a reason to increase salaries for teachers where more teachers are most needed particular­ly — and not just in the cities but in particular subjects.

Typically teacher union contracts won’t allow that. So any new state money addressing the teacher shortage should be exempt from union contract restrictio­ns.

Any new money also should come with audit requiremen­ts to determine if the money improves student performanc­e, which is so bad in the cities that no additional spending is likely to accomplish anything unless it hires parents for the kids.

Unreal Bridgeport

The Board of Education in Bridgeport, whose schools long have been in turmoil and whose students perform terribly, wants to hire a public relations company. According to the Connecticu­t Post, the company would “manage the district’s reputation, provide risk mitigation and consultati­on services, develop a crisis response plan, and train administra­tors in crisis communicat­ions.”

It’s as if the board has never heard that to change the image, it’s necessary to change the reality. But then all Connecticu­t seems to have given up on changing the cruel reality of its cities.

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