Comment by solatic
6 months ago
> If [a vacant storefront tax] “worked,” the mechanism would be to force a lot of commercial property to default, which could put a lot of new space on the market at lower prices, which should lower the commercial rent. But it would also hurt the banks a lot, which has a history of leading to bad consequences and subsequent bailouts.
Sounds like the right trade-off to me. Let the banks get hurt for the pain that's coming to them for making a loan on an asset that declined in value, let's see if it actually causes bank bankruptcy, then let's consider bailouts. Because letting balance sheets express a lie about financial health is preferable somehow? Letting pressure continue to build until commercial property owners can't cover interest payments is preferable?
Ideally, commercial development would be done by publicly-owned companies. Instead of renting, sell the storefront for a pittance to a mom-and-pop owner operator, conditioned on occupancy and using it for primary income. If occupancy is forfeited, then sell it to a new mom-and-pop.
Selling instead of renting means there are no rent increases. You go back to having local stores that have been open for 40+ years that have a real relationship with the surrounding community. You make it possible for young chefs to get a restaurant space to prove their mettle without needing to cozy up to some wealthy financier who then sucks away most of the income. You make it possible for young people to start new independent businesses without a mortgage on their future, which helps them invest further in their surrounding community. Being able to buy cheap storefront space is what made the American Dream possible for so many immigrants to America and built the largest middle class in the world.
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