Why would you cap the market rate for renting at the market rate for mortgages?
I wasnt sure which cap you were applying...you mentioned people who can "well afford to buy", so I assumed mortgage amounts were an option. You have clarified it that it is market rents, so we will go with that.
That would mean it would be cheaper for them to buy so there would be an economic imperative for them to move out, buy in the area, and thus make a social house available for one of the families living in a hotel. That would be socially just.
You see this is where it gets confusing. I have asked you what your mechanism is for calculating appropriate rents to social housing tenants to be. We have somewhat established that a 30% is applicable to earnings of €80K. But thats about it. But it is not clear what it would be for €70, 60, 50, 40K etc.
If people who can afford to provide for themselves did so it would mean resourced could be used to provide for those who can't.
Yes, I agree, if it were all so simple.
But here is the crux, as long as there is insufficient houses available, then if people "who can afford to buy" join the first time buyers market, it further squeezes that cohort of working people out of the FTB housing market, who never qualified for social housing by virtue of their incomes. They may well be able to afford to buy, they may well be able to rent, but as it is there money, they do have some entitlement to decide what is and what is not suitable for their needs and wants. Ditto, the social housing tenants who are also working, earning their own money. They may well be able to afford to buy, they may well be able to rent, but as it is their money, they do have some entitlement to decide what is and what is not suitable for their needs and wants - no different. They cannot be compelled to buy or rent a property that they think is unsuitable for their needs especially if it is their own earned money that they will be using to pay the rent or mortgage.
I have rented houses in the past, and I have bought two houses. So I know exactly what it is like to look for suitable accommodation. By myself, I was never fussy. But with a wife and children it is a whole different ball game. Anything from the neighbours next door, the size of the back or front garden, is there a garden shed, a reasonably sized bathroom, living room, south-facing, north-facing, proximity to public transport, proximity to local amenities, schools, jobs, etc...etc...the list goes on.
As someone who is a tenant in a social house, who can well afford to buy or rent their own property, are they not entitled to consider these factors if they are actually going to spend their own income on a property? Do they not have a say? Or are you proposing that a State agency either evicts them onto the street, effectively compelling them to buy somewhere that is not suitable? And considering they already do pay a rent that is tied to income under the Differential Rent Scheme.
In the meantime the house they vacated is now occupied by a family in need. This family, like the family before them now have an opportunity for a stable platform, to educate and train, to pursue a better living for themselves and one day, just like the previous occupants, earn enough to buy or rent themselves. Except, they know how precarious the private rental market is, they know how hard it is to find somewhere more suitable to buy - so they renege on social justice. They only work intermittently, earning more than the minimum wage but never enough to ever be considered as "well able to buy or rent" their own private dwelling. Thus ensuring perpetuity in the property, not contributing in any meaningful way to the cost of providing the social house.
Back into the house where our previous tenants have been compelled to buy, who do go out and earn and pay taxes and educate themselves and pursue better careers, one of the earners has lost their job, the company he worked for went bust. They are now behind in arrears, under severe pressure (like thousands others)
They are now wondering to themselves - why did they ever bother to try lift themselves out of poverty and welfare dependence? Facing repossession of their home, or eviction if they chose to rent, they now join the list of 'more needy'.
This is just one example of a tiny amount of the complexities that will arise if people are compelled to leave their homes - we could spend the rest of the year talking about all the other obstacles the proposals to move people on would cause, tying the whole system up in knots.
Saying that they "should" leave for notions of social justice is fine. A bit like me saying Apple "should" just pay the €15bn tax for notions of social justice, but will it make a difference? Social justice can only ever be administered by the law. It is futile to except each and every individual to act in accordance to social justice at all times, each one of us acts in our own self-interest, or perceived self-interest, isnt that right?