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@denny #TwoPercentOfRent was my proposal for this. Glad to see the idea popping up elsewhere.
Minimum hourly wage to be 2% of the median monthly housing unit cost in the county or parish where the work is performed.
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100% small businesses should be reminded on a daily basis that low cost of living locally means lower wage pressure for them and more money in their potential customer’s pockets.
Small business, especially should be an ally with their customers and employees deciding what should be infrastructure for their community.
The worst struggle in a city like San Francisco, for instance for restaurants is the cost of living here. And in fact, I think the DSW is lobbying for social housing.
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@denny Shorter route: flat tax rate of 10%, and make Behavioral Science core education. Less and less root cause analysis, equals more and more baseless insanity.
Phi your Pi (Spin Physics)
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@denny I wish. The upper classes will respond by
- slicing up the rental apartments so that you have to rent storage facilities
- spread rumors of renters committing fraud by renting out multiple apartments per household -
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@denny Here's my class warfare idea: Tie ropes around the necks of bosses and landlords, and tie the other end to the top of lamp posts.
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@denny I wish. The upper classes will respond by
- slicing up the rental apartments so that you have to rent storage facilities
- spread rumors of renters committing fraud by renting out multiple apartments per household -
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I love the idea - though it is a bit overstated by thatspectacularpigeon. Setting *max* rent relative to *min* wage feels too extreme. Not that I don't think that should be the goal, it's just too much of a reach from our current state.
Walking-mirage's interpretation seems for plausible as a lofty bot potentially achievable dream: tie average rent to minimum wage.
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Oh this is good.
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@denny There used to be a time when factories built homes for the workers.
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@denny
I wonder what effect this would have on home prices. I suspect it would have a deflationary effect, which would anger landlords but make it easier for people to own their own homes.I'm for it.
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@denny Shorter route: flat tax rate of 10%, and make Behavioral Science core education. Less and less root cause analysis, equals more and more baseless insanity.
Phi your Pi (Spin Physics)
@EvoScale @denny
Flat taxes are regressive and lead inevitably to more income inequality. Setting a low flat tax rate means municipalities must charge higher sales and property taxes, which make up a higher proportion of poor people's incomes. Non-homeowners see the latter in the form of higher rents. -
and the threat of "you complain about anything at work and we kick your family out of the house in the middle of the night" was part of that.
The more reasonable version is something like, when a city agrees to the infrastructure for a big factory, the factory pays to build housing that is then either public or sold to the workers at a wage-reasonable cost.
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@denny that’s actually a great idea but I could easily see them making loop holes or exceptions for these people
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We are talking about different centuries and probably different countries. My reference is the Ruhrgebiet as well as Munich in Germany. Margarete Krupp at the beginning of the 20th century for example.
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We are talking about different centuries and probably different countries. My reference is the Ruhrgebiet as well as Munich in Germany. Margarete Krupp at the beginning of the 20th century for example.
Do you know what were the constraints on how the factory managed the housing? Always interesting to get into the details of anything that worked!
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P pearl22@troet.cafe shared this topic