Is second/third home ownership ethical in this economy?
Especially when those 2nd, 3rd, + properties are being used as passive short term rentals. Observing the state of the housing situation "Hmm there aren't enough homes for normal families to each have a chance, I should turn this extra property of mine into a vacation rental." does this make said person a POS?
Yeah, a second house for traveling workers or seasonal migrants is fine, bit luxury but fine, but renting them out is where you're starting to be a dick.
I hope you are aware that people exist who can't afford home ownership, and rental is their only option. If nobody owns a rental house for them to occupy, they have no chance of living in a house whatsoever.
Oh sure, like myself. I hate the idea of ownership. Ties you down and comes with a ton of extra bills and upkeep... I prefer the flexibility and ability to f-off if something bothers me at any given time. But that's not the point the OP tried to make, so I didn't even want to bring that argument :-)
Excluding land, you're looking at about 135k USD. Land, whatever. Labor estimate is 30-50% according to the article, so let's say around 190k (using ~40% and some rounding).
And that gives you a bare-bone structure without a lick of paint, furniture, carpets, curtains or any other interior (and exterior) decoration.
So even if you do everything by yourself on a gifted piece of land, I hope you can somehow understand that there are people out there who simply don't have and/or qualify for a loan of >130k USD.
TL;DR: Rent collectors are literallyfar from the only reason housing is unaffordable to so many right now.
Love how ya just skipped right over the whole part where there's more empty units than there are unhoused people to fill them.
You literally just completely ignored the actual substance of what the landlords are doing that makes housing unattainable in an oversupplied market.
Building entirely new houses is a luxury for people who've lucked out big, we're talking about the supply of housing that already exists, which in numbers alone, should be providing an all time low of prices adjusted for inflation.
The "shortage" is an invented crisis to not acknowledge that we'd have no problems if we took a closer look at how much those landlord parasites actually need that fifth unit they also don't live in.