• @SCB
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    110 months ago

    “Rent-seeking” as an economic concept is not when you collect rent, as a landlord does.

    • @Aceticon
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      10 months ago

      In Economics “rent-seeking” is seeking to receive a “rent”, but the concept of “rent” here is broader than merelly the kind of rent paid for a property (for example, when banks place themselves in the position to get a commission out of every small financial transaction out there, through “Touch To Pay” schemes, they are “rent-seeking”).

      So whilst not all rent-seekers are landlords (probably not even most rent-seekers), all landlords are rent-seekers, which is exactly how I handled those definitions in my post.

      Your post is like saying “‘Apple’ is not the same as ‘fruit’” when somebody else whilst talking about apples called them “fruit”.

      • @SCB
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        10 months ago

        Landlords aren’t necessarily rent-seekers (though some individuals conceivable could be) as economists use the term, and your lack of understanding of economic rent-seeking is something you can fix.

        Rent-seeking is a concept in economics that states that an individual or an entity seeks to increase their own wealth without creating any benefits or wealth to the society. Rent-seeking activities aim to obtain financial gains and benefits through the manipulation of the distribution of economic resource

        Providing a home is a benefit to the society.

        Credit processors (what you’re calling “banks”) provide a service to merchants. They are also not rent-seeking.

        • @Aceticon
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          10 months ago

          A builder provides the “home”, not the landlord.

          The landlord just takes advantage of a superior financial position to sit between the builder and the person who actually needs a home, and get a periodic payment for that.

          As you seem to be having trouble with that, I’ve done the google search for you, so here’s Wikipedia’s definition of Rent-Seeking.

          • @SCB
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            10 months ago

            An example of rent-seeking in a modern economy is spending money on lobbying for government subsidies in order to be given wealth that has already been created, or to impose regulations on competitors, in order to increase one’s own market share.[15] Another example of rent-seeking is the limiting of access to lucrative occupations, as by medieval guilds or modern state certifications and licensures. According to some libertarian perspectives, taxi licensing is a textbook example of rent-seeking.[16] To the extent that the issuing of licenses constrains overall supply of taxi services (rather than ensuring competence or quality), forbidding competition from other vehicles for hire renders the (otherwise consensual) transaction of taxi service a forced transfer of part of the fee, from customers to taxi business proprietors.

            The concept of rent-seeking would also apply to corruption of bureaucrats who solicit and extract “bribe” or “rent” for applying their legal but discretionary authority for awarding legitimate or illegitimate benefits to clients.[17] For example, taxpayers may bribe officials to lessen their tax burden.

            One would assume they would list… You know… rent, if it applied

            You not liking landlords doesn’t change the meaning of words. You can still dislike landlords, and just use words properly.

            • @Aceticon
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              510 months ago

              You seem to have missed the whole part of that article (most of it) about how the expression had its origin in describing the activities of those using land ownership to extract rents.

              You know, getting a “rent” for “land”, also known as being a “landlord”.

              All that your quote does is confirm the point I made two comments above that “rent-seeker” is group that includes all of “landlord” like “fruit” is group that includes all “apples” - I suppose when you’re willfully blind it’s normal to run around in circles.

              • @SCB
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                10 months ago

                What you’re missing is they were literally lords, who literally owned land, and extracted rents from shit like charging to harvest kelp on their shoreline, or charging a toll to navigate down a stream, etc.

                Ie. not contributing any benefit (preventing access to a natural resource/mode of travel otherwise possible)

                It has nothing to do with providing homes, which is a distinct economic benefit.

                This all comes from this very long bit of Adam Smith’s work, which I will link in its entirety and encourage you to read, with the above definition of a literal landlord in mind.

                https://www.adamsmithworks.org/documents/chapter-xi-of-the-rent-of-land

                As a similar confusing distinction, though a modern toll road may seem similar to extracting rent to navigate a stream, a modern toll road explicitly addresses the externalities of using the road (ie. Damage to the road), and is a non-negative use of rent seeking.

                • @Aceticon
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                  210 months ago

                  Now you’re just making shit up and whatabouting in every direction you can think of to see if it sticks…

                  • @SCB
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                    10 months ago

                    I’m literally quoting Adam Smith

                    You can believe whatever imaginary economics you want, but these terms have actual meaning

                • archomrade [he/him]
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                  110 months ago

                  Modern landlords to not “provide housing”. They extract rent from the use of a house that would otherwise be available to purchase by the renter if not for the landlord holding it for rent extraction. Worse still, since rent seekers compete with homeowners for housing they end up driving up the price, which prices out homeowners and creates the demand for renting to begin with.

                  Any other “service” a landlord provides would otherwise be levied as those services are provided (like a handyman or contractor being paid for work done to your house). In the case of the landlord, the rent extracted is maximally realized by providing the least amount of service (even none) for the most amount of rent. Rent is completely detached from any actual labor or addition of value.

                  • @solstice
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                    10 months ago

                    Misplaced vitriol. What if you don’t want to own? I don’t. I don’t wanna deal with any of that shit like broken ac, leaky roof, mowing the lawn etc. How do I rent if nobody can or will rent to me?

                    Rent and prices are directly correlated to the same things. Local economy, future outlook, interest rates, the usual stuff.

                    If you’re pissed off about housing costs that’s another story. If you’re pissed off because a landlord didn’t fix your ac or hot water then that’s another story too. But you just sound like an uneducated crazy person when you go around ranting like a lunatic about rent extraction.

                  • @SCB
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                    10 months ago

                    Ah yes the famous houses of apartment blocks that the mean old renters built and then… owned.

                    Also labor has nothing to do with value whatsoever.

                • @[email protected]
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                  110 months ago

                  Ie. not contributing any benefit (preventing access to a natural resource

                  So a company builds a house. Instead of selling to the person who will live in that house, a Landlord purchases it at a higher rate (preventing acess to land + shelter) and then rents it to the person who will live there.

                  The Landlord in this scenario has provided nothing of economic value, and is restricting access to shelter necessary for survival.

                  • @SCB
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                    -110 months ago

                    People who rent are not generally people who can purchase houses