Households being crushed by rent and health care costs

The consumer inflation index rose only 0.2% last month and everyone breathed a sigh of relief because of it. However, a cursory look behind the numbers showed real problems with two of the largest spending items.

Rent

In May, rent was 3.8% higher than a year ago, the strongest 12-month rate of increase since 2008, the Labor Department said in its consumer price index report Thursday.
It’s not only the strongest pace of growth in many years, it’s also much higher than pay increases. Inflation-adjusted hourly wages were up 1.4% in the twelve months ending in May.

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By coincidence, a new survey came out today that showed the public has a different opinion of the housing situation than the news media.

Eight-one percent of the respondents think housing affordability is a problem in America today, according to the survey, but even more telling is the fact that only 29 percent now believe the housing crisis of the last decade is over....Forty-four percent think the crisis is still going on and 19 percent think the worst is yet to come.

35% of people thought the housing crises was over last year, which means a significant percentage of people think its getting worse.

Like last year, 53 percent of the respondents say they made sacrifices over the past three years to be able to cover their rent or mortgage, including taking on an additional job or more hours at work, stopping saving for retirement, accumulating credit-card debt or cutting back on healthy food or health care.

It probably wouldn't surprise you that nowhere in the country can someone on minimum wage can afford an apartment, but this might surprise you.

even if the minimum wage were raised to $15 an hour — the level low-wage workers have been demanding in a constant flow of strikes and protests and the highest level supported by Democratic lawmakers — they would still be out of luck.
The report found that to afford a one-bedroom apartment at the average fair market rate without shelling out more than 30 percent of his income, someone has to earn at least $16.35 an hour.

43 million households pay more 30% of their income in rent, and 11.4 million pay more than half their income. So significant rent inflation is a huge deal, and neither presidential candidate has a plan.
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It's not just rent. The homeownership rate is the lowest in half a century and still dropping. It'll keep dropping.

"Saving for a down payment can be difficult for prospective first-time homebuyers given the absence of substantial wage growth in recent years combined with the burden of student loan debt many are struggling under," said Daren Blomquist, senior vice president at RealtyTrac. "Even just a 3 percent down payment requires 14 percent of annual wages on average across the 513 counties we analyzed, and in 67 counties a 3 percent down payment requires more than one-fifth of annual wages."

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Even with artificially low interest rates, home prices are well above historical averages, and first-time buyers are being squeezed out.
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Solutions to this crisis being offered include a) let the market build more houses (Republican solution), or b) more subsidized housing (Democratic solution).
Neither solution will happen quickly or be sufficient. What needs to be done is reform the perverse tax incentives that encourage wealthy domestic and foreign investors to speculate in real estate and use houses as a store of value.

Medical Care

Medical care costs increased 0.3 percent after a similar gain in April. The cost of hospital services shot up 0.7 percent after rising 0.3 percent the prior month.

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Health care costs are rising at a pre-Obamacare rate once again. More importantly, they are about to explode higher.

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas (covering 600,000 enrollees) requested a 59 percent premium increase. Providence Health Plan in Oregon (covering 100,000 enrollees) requested a 32 percent hike. Anthem of Indiana (covering 70,000 enrollees) requested a 29 percent hike.
To date, the national weighted average requested increase is about 20 percent. A 20 percent increase means roughly $1,000 in higher premiums for a single person and $3,000 in higher premiums for a family of four. That’s real money and will hurt millions of people.

$1,000 is simply not affordable to a vast majority of Americans. It was only last month that this survey came out.

Two-thirds of Americans would have difficulty coming up with the money to cover a $1,000 emergency, according to an exclusive poll released Thursday, a signal that despite years after the Great Recession, Americans' finances remain precarious as ever.
These difficulties span all incomes, according to the poll conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Three-quarters of people in households making less than $50,000 a year and two-thirds of those making between $50,000 and $100,000 would have difficulty coming up with $1,000 to cover an unexpected bill.

A lot of Americans are about to get hit by that "unexpected bill", and that's no joke. That's a crisis.
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It isn't just Obamacare premiums. Obamacare deductibles can run over $6,000 and $7,000, those high deductibles are making Obamacare useless to the working poor.
Millions more now have health insurance, but that hasn't made it more affordable.
Despite the high insurance costs, health insurance companies are losing money. 13 out of the 23 federally subsidized Obamacare Co-ops have since failed. Some of these co-ops are suing the federal government for billions of dollars.

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Living in CA, high rents are a way of life. All around where I live, and where I work, it is clear that people are forming extra-familial groups to be able to afford the cost of housing.

In my neck of the desert, a studio apartment -IF you can find one- can cost $1600/mo. That is a one, followed by a six, then two zeros. THEN there is a decimal point. A one-bedroom apartment is $2000 and up, while a two bedroom is around $2400.

There are far more houses in my area than there are apartments, and houses range from $1600 for a hovel to well over $3000.

Such prices mean that more wage-earning people are required to share the expense. Each person is likely to own a car (we won't go into what kind of shape most of these are in, nor whether they are insured). Each vehicle is going to be parked somewhere near the domicile, some in the driveway, some at the curb, and maybe a couple on the grass - IF the local ordinances allow it (my town does not).

Five or six cars to such houses is common. Most houses on my street are like this, even mine in a sense. Despite there being 1.5 jobs at my house, there are SIX vehicles (1 out of service).

Getting back to my point: If the house is $2500/mo, and five workers live there, each has to come up with $500/mo for rent. If all of these workers are full-time, rent costs $3.13/hr. As the vast majority of CA workers now earn $10/hr as the state minimum wage, there remains enough money for beer and food.

So as I hope I've demonstrated, it can be done. One just has to LIKE the people one invites to live with you to share the expense.

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Vowing To Oppose Everything Trump Attempts.

I rent a three bedroom townhouse for $3700/mo and I live 20 miles from SF. What I pay might get a 1BR anywhere decent in the city. Studios start around $2000 in the cheap places.

My family earns a handsome income but I would have to earn 2 or 3 times what I do to even consider buying anything, and that anything would only be commercial property. It's absolutely nonsensical for anybody but the very wealthy to buy around the city.

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in 2016, who'd have thought it?

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On to Biden since 1973

snoopydawg's picture

The whole debacle was a gift to the insurance and pharmaceutical companies.
What good does it do for people to have health insurance if they can't use it because the deductibles are too high? They are now both paying for insurance and then paying out of pocket for the doctor visits and their medications.
The insurance companies are saying that they have to raise the premiums because so many people are now being able to see a doctor. Bullshit.
And of course, congress didn't put anything in the bill to keep the insurance companies from doing this.
I'm sure it has helped some people who had catastrophic illnesses or major accidents, but what percentage of people fell into that category?
And we kept hearing that the ACA was the path to single payer. Really? Has anyone heard that someone in congress is working towards that? I haven't.
And Hillary came out and said that it will never, ever happen, while Bernie wanted it to and had great ideas for achieving it. Yet people chose Hillary instead.
Well the ones who actually voted for her.
I still question how many votes were flipped from Bernie to Hillary, and then there's all the people who weren't able to vote because their party affiliation got changed.
I think this is going as planned.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

Every co-pay increase, rising deductible, denied medication or procedure is blamed by my patients on Obamacare. The Democratic Party has taken onto itself blame for ongoing health care inflation.

This is poetic justice, since the Democratic Party sold out those of us who wanted single-payer, or even a public option to be part of health care reform. The Obama administration gave away drug price negotiation to get Billy Tauzin's silence from PhRMA. They sold health care reform to AHIP with a completely inadequate package of cost containing measures. Come to think of it, Democrats deserve to be blamed for rampant health care inflation. They could have done something about it, but they were too corrupt to get it done.

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Please help support caucus99percent!

The Insurance, and pharmaceutical industries.

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and now rent them back at punitive rates, holding habitable space off the market to artificially inflate prices.

And they scratch their heads and puzzle over what folks are so angry about.

Remind me again ... what will an HRC administration do to fix any of this?

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

snoopydawg's picture

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And people can't see this. What the hell are they thinking?
If Obama's many betrayals didn't wake people up, and the evidence of Hillary's corruption is acceptable for them, then people who call themselves 'liberals and progressives' are just as bad as the people who vote for the republicans.
God, I am still stunned that so many people voted against the best candidate we had to try to turn this country around.
We will certainly get more wars on countries that have resources that the corporations want. We'll get more screwed by our government when they privatize social security and gut more social programs.
And when the TPP gets passed, we'll get screwed by the corporations that will be able to over rule our regulatory agencies and see even more jobs offshored.
That's what people are voting for.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

with a bunch of graphs and links.
I'm thinkin about posting this to TOP

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snoopydawg's picture

How in hell can they justify this and when is Warren going to 'speak' out against this like she does about the banks?
Not that her speeches have led to any bills being passed, let alone be considered.
But hey, those fiery speeches sure sound good and make her seem like she is fighting for us.
Post it there and let's watch people defend how great the ACA is.
Especially brainwrap.
Maybe teacherken will write another diary and explain to us how Hillary has a plan to address this.
Smile

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Steven D's picture

what a treasure it is to have you here. I am always amazed at what I can learn from your posts. Thank you so much.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

featheredsprite's picture

can find articles on how to make your own pitchforks and torches.

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Life is strong. I'm weak, but Life is strong.

Sandino's picture

ironically enough, cannot be handled by pitchforks.

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HEDGES: And there–let’s go back. They’re extracting money from the economy by debt peonage. By raising–.

HUDSON: By not playing a productive role, basically.

HEDGES: Right. So it’s credit card interest, mortgage interest, car loans, student loans, that’s how they make their funds.

HUDSON: That’s right. So they don’t, money is not a factor of production. But in order to have access to credit, in order to get the money, in order to get an education, you have to pay the banks. And at New York University here, for instance, they have Citibank, I think Citibank people were on the board of directors at NYU. You get the students, when they come here, to start at the local bank. And once you are in a bank and have monthly funds taken out of your account for electric, utilities, or whatever, it’s very hard to change.

So basically you have what the classical economists called the rentier class. The class that lives on economic rents. Landlords, monopolists charging more, and the banks. So that if you have a pharmaceutical company such that raises the rate of drug from $12 a shot to $200, that’s all of a sudden, their profits go up. Their increased price for the drug is created, is counted in the national income accounts, as if the economy is producing more. So all of this presumed economic growth that has all been taken by the 1% in the last ten years, and people say the economy is growing. But the economy isn’t growing–.

HEDGES: Because it’s not reinvested.

HUDSON: That’s right. It’s not–it’s not production, it’s not consumption. The wealth of the 1% is obtained by essentially lending money to the 99% and then charging interest on it, and recycling this interest at an exponentially growing rate.

HEDGES: And why is it important, as I think you point out in your book, that economic theory counts this rentier income as productive income? Explain why that’s important.

Chris Hedges interviews an economist.

I just pulled out some text from the middle.

HUDSON: If you’re a rentier, then you want to say that, hey, I earned my income by–.

HEDGES: We’re talking about Goldman Sachs, by the way.

HUDSON: Yeah, Goldman Sachs.

HEDGES: Is perfect.

HUDSON: Yes. The head of Goldman Sachs came out and said, Goldman Sachs workers are the most productive in the world. That’s why they’re paid what they are. And the concept of productivity in America is the income divided by the labor. So if you’re Goldman Sachs and you pay yourself $20 million a year in salary and bonuses, you’re considered to have added $20 million to GDP, and that’s enormously productive. So we’re talking with tautology. We’re talking with circular reasoning here.

So the issue is whether Goldman Sachs, Wall Street, predatory pharmaceutical firms, actually add a product or whether they’re just exploiting other people. And that’s why I called my book Parasitism, because the parasite, people think of the parasite as simply taking money, taking blood out of the host, or taking money out of the economy. But in nature, it’s much more complicated. The parasite can’t simply come in and take something. First of all, it needs to numb. It has an enzyme that numbs the host so the host doesn’t even realize the parasite’s there. And then the parasites have another enzyme that makes the host–it takes over the host’s brain. And it makes the host imagine that the parasite is part of the body, that actually part of itself, to be protected.

Well, that’s basically what Wall Street has done. It’s made, it depicts itself as part of the economy. Not as a wrapping around it. Not as external to it. But actually is the part that’s helping the body grow, and that actually is responsible for most of the growth, when in fact it’s the parasite that is taking over the growth.
So the result is an inversion of classical economics. It turns Adam Smith upside down. It says what the classical economists said was unproductive, parasitism, actually is the real economy, and the parasites are labor and industry, that get in the way of what the parasite wants, which is to reproduce itself, not help the host, the labor and capital [inaud.].

HEDGES: And then the classical economists like Adam Smith were quite clear that unless that rentier income, you know, the money made by things like hedge funds, was heavily taxed, and put back into the economy, the economy would ultimately go into a kind of tailspin. And I think the example of that, which you point out in your book, is what’s happened in terms of large corporations with stock dividends and buybacks. And maybe you can explain that.

Excellent post.

Here is the link

Michael Hudson and Chris Hedges: The Real World Cost of Turning Classical Economics Upside Down

Your article is on Medical Care & Rents

Only in the last couple of weeks, as I slide off TOP more and more, have I been at Naked Capitalism

I did two searches

Naked Capitalism Healthcare Costs

and

Naked Capitalism rent costs

And found several excellent articles. I put in this one.

Here is a link to just one more of the articles

Responding to Political Attacks on Single Payer

I pulled up 11 links from the two searches. And as I finish this comment I am struck about how little content there is at TOP. It is horse race and personality.

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snoopydawg's picture

How true is that word and the results of it? That is a great summary of what is happening to us because our government at all levels have sold us out to the highest bidders. I don't know if we have ever had a representative government. The stories from the times of the robber barons days don't seem to have changed much because instead of people and corporations giving money to our government officials, they hire lobbyists to do that for them. I don't see how that is any different and have no idea why it is legal. Except that congress wrote the rules saying it was. Now days though, the lobbyists write the bills and congress passes them.
Liz Fowler from WellPoint who was on Baucus's staff wrote most of the ACA.
Here's another article about how powerful the pharmaceutical industry is.
This is a great website which has lots of great articles on what is actually happening in the world.
http://landdestroyer.blogspot.com
From telling the truth about how the US and its allies created ISIL to this article about Who really runs the World

June 3, 2016 (Tony Cartalucci - NEO) - Like a mythical sea monster, the true nature of a Wall Street-London centered global corporatocracy is often talked about but rarely seen. However, on rare occasions, a tentacle breaks the surface and affords the public an opportunity to examine and assess its true, gargantuan dimensions.

Just such a moment occurred when leaked diplomatic letters from the Colombian Embassy in Washington D.C. revealed just how far the United States government is willing to go on behalf of the corporate-financier interests that clearly shape the entirety of its foreign policy.

Leaked diplomatic letters sent from Colombia’s Embassy in Washington describe how a staffer with the Senate Finance Committee, which is led by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, warned of repercussions if Colombia moves forward on approving the cheaper, generic form of a cancer drug.
The drug is called imatinib [Gleevec]. Its manufacturer, Novartis, markets the drug in Colombia as Glivec. The World Health Organization’s List of Essential Medicines last year suggested it as treatment not only for chronic myeloid leukemia, but also gastrointestinal tumors. Currently, the cost of an annual supply is over $15,000, or about two times the average Colombian’s income.

http://landdestroyer.blogspot.com/2016/06/who-runs-washington-long-reach...
And after the TPP is passed, the countries that provide decent health care to their citizens will be locked in to the pharmaceutical industry's grasp and won't be able to use generic medicines for a certain number of years.
It's too bad that Obama didn't work as hard to pass a decent health care bill as he did in working on the TPP. But there's no money to be made after he leaves office if hadn't screwed us and given the industries everything that they wanted, is there?
Just think, he and Michelle can go the way the Clintons did and set up their own foundation. Maybe one of their kids will be appointed SOS and be able to steer contracts to their foundation like Hillary did.

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mjsmeme's picture

snoopydawg's picture

of topics? Either people left out of disgust, or where banned because these types of topic reflect badly on Obama and Hillary and that is unacceptable for the greatest president since FDR, and the next greatest president since Obama.
The disconnect from reality over there is stunning.

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over there.
It didn't get many comments, but one commenter said I was brave for posting this on GOS.

It's a crying shame.

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snoopydawg's picture

People are too busy bashing Bernie's speech tonight.
I flagged the tip jar because Bonsai put a picture of Oscar the grouch next to Bernie's picture.
And I ran out of flags where people wrote that he can wipe his ass with his speech, or send him some preparation H.
Apparently he's didn't congratulate Hillary because he hates women.
What a cesspool that place is.

I left a comment reply to someone who wrote that his speech was all about him.
I wrote ' I guess you missed all the parts of his speech where he laid out what would help the people in this country that are having economic difficulties and what Bernie talked about was what both the democrats and this website used to stand for' but I'm sure that people will tell me that Hillary will get us all those things.
Boy am I thankful for this site
Smile

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

Giving those people one chance is as much as they deserve.
I'm not reposting sh*t over there.

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To convice average Joe that it is time for single payer AND to push his congresscritters? Maybe take to the street?

The hikes are getting brutal and are un-doable and absolutely unsustainable. They will leave no money for disposable income and will kill the economy.

Or course rate hikes on health insurance doesn't touch the people who should be advocating for us...

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Thank god Obama "fixed" the economy and "saved" the housing market.

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pswaterspirit's picture

I went to a technical school for a year. They had a program for bank tellers that was taught partially by having a branch of a credit union on campus. You know I have never done business with a regular bank? 30 years and not once. So there is a point that people don't like to change. I am just the polar opposite.

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pswaterspirit's picture

I went to a technical school for a year. They had a program for bank tellers that was taught partially by having a branch of a credit union on campus. You know I have never done business with a regular bank? 30 years and not once. So there is a point that people don't like to change. I am just the polar opposite.

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Sandino's picture

Presumably, since the increasing use of housing as a speculative asset can be seen as part of the general asset inflation induced by the lack of returns from more traditional investment/speculation routes.

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If you like ZIRP, you're gonna love NIRP. When NIRP kicks in, then in Soviet America, debt will pay you! Also, packs of robbers will insist at gunpoint that you hold their money for them. It will be spectacular!

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MonetaryLeviathon's picture

by rent and health care costs .... is an understatement. To keep my job I end up having to work 75 hours a week fairly often and leave home for weeks or months at a time. Worked a 20 hour day two weeks ago... my days off are assigned including weekends ... and they call it a 'good' job.

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