Princeton's Matthew Desmond Gets Everything Wrong About Poverty's Root Causes
Desmond's analysis never goes deeper than his facile assertion that "poverty persists because some wish and will it to."
HD DownloadMatthew Desmond is a Princeton University professor and the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship, a Pulitzer Prize, a PEN/John Kenneth Galbraith Award, and a National Book Critics Circle award. His recent book Poverty, by America—a New York Times bestseller that was ecstatically well-reviewed in many mainstream outlets—attempts to reframe the national policy debate around poverty.
Like the muckrakers of the Progressive Era, Desmond is a master storyteller who gathers firsthand anecdotal material to illuminate social problems. But his novelist's eye for detail can cause readers to overlook the absence of big-picture analysis or useful solutions.
What causes poverty in America, according to Desmond? He answers with bland, awkwardly worded slogans, such as: "Poverty persists because some wish and will it to." He says we need "policies that refuse to partner with poverty, policies that threaten its very survival."
Desmond gets more specific about what doesn't cause poverty. He dismisses cultural explanations, such as single-parent households and declining marriage rates. He quickly dismisses the idea that the welfare state traps people in cycles of dependency, claiming that these arguments rely on anecdotal evidence, even though there's a vast systematic literature on the subject. Desmond doesn't take up political scientist Charles Murray's basic challenge to explain why it is that between 1949 and 1964 the American poverty rate dropped by 22 percentage points before the government did practically anything to help. After President Lyndon Johnson launched his war on poverty, the decline leveled considerably.
Desmond approaches his firsthand investigations with the preconception that poverty is a byproduct of capitalist exploitation. Prices aren't set in a competitive marketplace, in his view; they're just a projection of greed. It's "tempting," he writes, "to blame rising housing costs on anything other than the fact that more than a few of us have a god-awful amount of money and are driving prices higher and higher through bidding wars."
A chapter on the real estate market titled "How We Force the Poor to Pay More" argues that it's twice as profitable to be a landlord in the inner city. Desmond doesn't bother explaining why even more unscrupulous people don't tap into this lucrative business opportunity.
His evidence for this claim is a 2019 paper he co-authored in the American Journal of Sociology that uses data so crude that it really tells us nothing. It omits important costs—like return on equity capital—and benefits—like real estate appreciation—that strongly bias the results in the direction Desmond wants. It ignores how landlords in poor areas are shamed, sued, occasionally jailed, forced to go to court to evict families, and must routinely travel to dangerous areas.
Those headaches scare away most investors, which means that those who stick it out can charge more.
The way to reduce costs in poor areas is to do the opposite of what Desmond advocates and make it easier for landlords to do business, such as streamlining the process of evicting tenants who don't pay rent.
Another chapter attacks government welfare for the rich and middle class, and though he makes some valid points, again Desmond is sloppy with numbers. In 2020, he writes, "the federal government spent more than $193 billion on homeowner subsidies," mostly benefiting "white" people "with six figure incomes" as compared to "$53 billion" for "direct housing assistance for low-income families."
By limiting his tally of what low-income families get to "direct housing assistance," he leaves out the entire $260 billion budget of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. And by limiting it to "federal," he excludes roughly $70 billion in state and local housing subsidies. He also excludes tax breaks, tax credits, and other indirect federal low-income housing subsidies.
The largest share of the $193 billion figure that Desmond counts as "homeowner subsidies" is an income tax that doesn't exist—an estimate of what people who own their homes would pay if they were taxed on the imputed rental value of their real estate. The logic is that if you buy a house and rent it out, the rent you receive is taxable income, so if you live in the house yourself instead of renting it, you should pay tax on the rental value.
This policy change would do nothing to reduce poverty. If the government started taxing homeowners on imputed rental value, homeowning would be less attractive, and home prices would fall. This would reduce construction jobs and housing supply. Existing homeowners who switched to renting under the new tax regime would not stop occupying homes, so the reduced supply would mean more homeless poor.
Desmond has a tendency to juxtapose the hardship of the poor and the resources of the rich. But he also concedes that there's "no evidence that the United States has become stingier over time" and, in fact, "federal relief [for the poor] has surged" even under Republican administrations. He seems to want homeowners to pay more taxes simply because he thinks homeowners are rich and punishing them with higher taxes is a good in itself.
Desmond's initial celebrity came from his best-selling 2016 book, Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City, which was excerpted in The New Yorker. The book argues that eviction is a major cause and exacerbator of misery for poor people.
The evidence Desmond assembled actually shows that eviction is one thread in a skein of causes—and one of the less tractable ones to address.
Evicted concludes with an epilogue that pushes strident policy views completely at odds with the detailed stories about poor families forced out of their homes which fill the rest of the book. Desmond is an engaging storyteller who manages to convey the experience of his extensive personal interviews and observations—he just doesn't know how to interpret his own evidence.
"Eviction is a cause, not just a condition, of poverty," is one of Desmond's most often quoted insights. None of the stories in the book support this contention. All the families he profiles had deep problems prior to their first evictions. Some are drug users or criminals; others are victims of crime; most are unemployed or have insecure low-wage employment without benefits; many have washed out of social programs like public housing and job training.
There are two heartwarming success stories driven by quitting heroin in one case and getting a good job in another. Neither was triggered by finding secure housing.
Desmond never grapples with the fact that housing is different from other forms of social welfare because it involves neighbors. Many of the tenants in his story are people no one is willing to live next to, so they get kicked out of shelters and public housing and turned down by landlords concerned with their effect on neighborhoods.
If Desmond were a serious housing policy analyst, he would understand the tradeoffs at play. High physical standards for occupancy eliminate much of the low-cost housing stock, but lack of standards can mean people live in unhealthful, unpleasant slums. Allowing bad tenants to stay in good places degrades neighborhoods. Concentrating low-income people in public housing projects can lead to conditions as bad as in any urban slums. Making it difficult for landlords to evict nonpayers, squatters, and vandals reduces the available housing stock as landlords abandon properties or refuse to rent to poor people, and it doesn't free up units for better tenants.
Desmond's book actually tells an inspiring story of people working hard to solve these problems, usually with their own time and money. The solutions are never perfect, but lots of people are trying, with patience and skill, to keep everyone housed as best they can.
The book repeats the claim at several points that "the majority of poor renting families in America spend over half of their income on housing, and at least one in four dedicates over 70 percent," which is another misreading of the evidence. Those numbers come from the American Housing Survey, which yields very low-quality information about family income.
Desmond should have consulted the Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey, which uses much higher-quality economic data about households and actually covers the population Desmond is writing about.
From those surveys, as of 2021, we find that the poorest 10 percent of the population spends an average of $12,416 per year on housing—including not just rent or mortgage payments but utilities, insurance, taxes, late fees, and other charges. That is 180 percent of their average pre-tax income—$6,916—but only 41 percent of their average annual total expenditures—$30,433—mildly higher than the overall population average of 34 percent.
How do families spend more than four times their pre-tax income? It's not by taking on debt or dipping into savings. On average, these same families added $5,570 to net assets. Low-income households get more money back from the government than they pay in taxes, and they receive subsidies and in-kind assistance that are not measured in most income numbers, including the American Housing Survey numbers. They also earn cash income in the underground economy.
There are certainly people forced to devote the majority of their financial resources to housing, and that's a problem worth caring about. But they account for a fraction of a percent of the U.S. population, or much less than what Desmond claims.
Halting all evictions, which some policy makers have called for since the publication of Evicted, would have catastrophic, unintended consequences. It would chase away honest landlords and embolden abusive ones, who will simply change the locks, cut off utilities, refuse essential repairs, or threaten their tenants with violence.
Desmond misinterprets his own evidence and favors moral grandstanding over serious policy analysis. His stories actually point to the conclusion that the biggest cause of poverty is crime. If poor neighborhoods were safe, if middle-class people didn't fear crime associated with housing projects, if poor people weren't routinely cheated and abused, poverty would be reduced to a simple problem of lack of money and could be eliminated for far less cost than current social spending.
Desmond's analysis never goes deeper than his facile assertion that "poverty persists because some wish and will it to."
"Abolishing poverty," as he sees it, means looking inside ourselves and finding the will to act. His books have had such a wide reach, I fear that this simplistic nonsense will cause policy makers to forget the hard-won lessons of the '60s in favor of policies that leave the American poor worse off than they already are.
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Do you think this Desmond guy changed his mind after hearing Javier Milei speak at Davos? Haha, yeah I know.
I doubt it because...
Desmond is opposed to the free marketplace.
Milei's a right-winger with a plan...
but life goes on.
Socialists gotta Socialist.
You mean all those $1400 Trump Checks didn't end poverty?
They weren’t meant to.
Yes, that is what anyone who understands anything thinks. They were never intended to.
If you think Trump paid for more votes than the left, you are a complete idiot.
Your honor, I only killed one man. Stalin killed millions, so putting me in jail is just not fair.
Just stubbornly incapable of recognizing the corruption and evil on the left aren't you.
turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit
Nope. But they sure did bring on Biden-inflation that broke everyone and everything. It was one of the dumbest things Trump ever supported. The House Democrats Cares Act.
Course when Biden and the Democrat trifecta did the exact same ARPA it just doubled that problem.
Asking what causes poverty is like asking what causes silence or what causes darkness.
The correct question is "What causes wealth?" and the answer is liberty.
"Abject poverty is the natural state of man" - some guy I don't remember and can't be bothered to look up
He was probably an oppressor.
Heinlein?
The Heinlein quote is close. He wrote:
“Throughout history, poverty is the normal condition of man. Advances which permit this norm to be exceeded — here and there, now and then — are the work of an extremely small minority, frequently despised, often condemned, and almost always opposed by all right-thinking people. Whenever this tiny minority is kept from creating, or (as sometimes happens) is driven out of a society, the people then slip back into abject poverty. This is known as 'bad luck.'”
I think from Time Enough For Love in 1974.
Our individual and inalienable rights to life, liberty and property, and the goods and services produced that result from respecting them.
Poverty is relative since our poors all have HDTV, cell phones, and diabetes from high-carb foods.
Basically the same stuff the King has except for his golden toilet in his Tower.
And computers. Which you use to access child porn on the dark web, but most people use for good.
turd lies. turd lies when he knows he’s lying. turd lies when we know he’s lying. turd lies when he knows that we know he’s lying.
turd lies. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit and a pederast besides.
+100000000 Well Said.
Truth.
Odd that in an entire article, the word "education" is not mentioned, and it seems to be an oversight of the book, not the reviewer.
How can that be? Commie-Education is more perverse than Commie-Housing. Gosh. I wonder what those two things have in common. ????
This policy change would do nothing to reduce poverty.
True
If the government started taxing homeowners on imputed rental value, homeowning would be less attractive,
False, multiple homeowning would be.
Single home ownership wouldn't change.
and home prices would fall.
Debatable given the second point.
Can we get some people who don't live in metropolis' to write for this rag?
You seem to have a lack of citations or explanations, just a lot of assertions.
You also seem to detest the idea of anyone owning multiple homes.
Fuck off, slaver.
I'm against this kid of taxing, but you're delusional if you think that homeownership will drop if you tax rental income.
What will happen is that those with more than one property will either sell them (increasing supply) or keep them forever (not changing supply).
I didn't say you were wrong, jackass. I just said bare assertions are useless. Provide some evidence.
You're the delusional one if you think your word is so precious that bare assertions mean anything.
What I was responding to was assertions. There is no reason to cite anything.
And for the record, IDK about perception, I post here to state opinions, and nothing more.
Imputed income is not income. It is a potential that is not realized for whatever reasons the property owner has for not realizing it. It is a tax on vapor.
In this case it's not even a potential that's not realized. In the description of the book it is an absurdity. If a homeowner decided to rent a house to themselves their left hand would give their right hand a wad of cash and, from a tax standpoint, their loss would nullify any gain and come out to a big fat net zero. Whatever book Mr. Brown is reading seems to assume that people who live in houses (that they miraculously acquired for free) could be renting them to someone else while they live in the space between dimensions I guess. It's a view so divorced from reality that it makes no sense to even argue with it.
That’s not true. The “loss” or better “expense” would be personal and therefore not deductible, yet the income would be taxable.
But why stop there? If taxes are appropriate when you could conceivably earn money by renting your home but use it instead why would the same not be true of your car, computer, and every other personal asset?
It's a means to collect property tax then to also tax you on economic activity that doesn't exist because you live in your home or if you rent to others to increase taxes on earnings because you could charge more if you rented out today but are not, usually because some contract or law precludes you from doing so.
Noobdragon is easily confused.
Why do you think this won’t happen? Buying a home is incredibly expensive. It seems obvious that if buying a home also results in an increased tax bill fewer people will be able or willing to make that commitment. Against this you offer no argument whatsoever other than to claim it won’t happen.
Do you have an answer?
I have to agree, the one major mistake I found from the article. It punishes you for not renting out your property while giving no reason not to do so. So it would encourage renting of homes rather than purchasing for your own use. I am not educated or pretentious enough to claim that I know the net effect.
On the other hand, the Mr. Brown had to wrap his mind around the nonsensical idea that people should get taxed on rental income that they aren't getting, and thus not taxing this nonexistent income is a subsidy. So, I presume he had a bit of a headache while writing that section.
A really good review of the book by John F. Early.
https://www.cato.org/regulation/winter-2023-2024/book-review-poverty-america
Yes, that was a good rogering.
"...poverty is a byproduct of capitalist exploitation. Prices aren't set in a competitive marketplace, in his view; they're just a projection of greed. "
He no doubt believes this because he "wishes and wills [it] to." I don't suppose he has an explanation as to why this is the case; what does anyone derive from policy, but more reasons to govern more and harder?
Can we just shut down the fucking useless universities already, at least the parts that produce nothing but this sort of palaver? This is the kind of crap that just continues to inspire more and more bad policies. For politicians like Warren, this is the moral equivalent of porn.
Those who wish and will for poverty to persist are mostly Democrat politicians, so they can harvest those votes.
Doesn't human poverty predate capitalism by about 400k years?
Causes of poverty [add as you wish]:
Lack of useful education and or skills [there seem to be plenty of opportunities but not enough qualified people to fulfill them].
Dysfunctional nuclear families that do not support education or a learning environment, or the sort of values to lead to achievement. Leads to kids who believe that the only way to succeed are to become an exceptional athlete or to sell drugs. AKA culture of poverty.
Crime.
All are intertwined, of course. And all we need is another f'ing elitist academic making up excuses that will do nothing but produce more taxes, and more poverty.
What causes poverty in America, according to Desmond? He answers with bland, awkwardly worded slogans, such as: “Poverty persists because some wish and will it to.”
That is accurate. More specifically, Democrats and progressives are creating poverty with the objective of giving government and their big donors more power. Some of their tools are inflation, welfare programs, the destruction of public education, DEI, green energy, “climate justice”, zoning reform, health and safety regulations, building standards, financial regulations, student loans, multiculturalism, transgenderism mass immigration, rent control, public housing, etc. All programs designed to depress wages, make people unemployable, and create and perpetuate poverty.
He says we need “policies that refuse to partner with poverty, policies that threaten its very survival.”
I hate to break it to him, but Matthew Desmond is an establishment hack and propagandist who is partnering with Democrats to create poverty. Some of these poverty-promoting policies are described in this very article.
Matthew Desmond is a Princeton University professor and the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship, a Pulitzer Prize, a PEN/John Kenneth Galbraith Award, and a National Book Critics Circle award.
I correct myself, he is an officially certified establishment hack.
Perhaps the poverty activists should ask themselves why a capitalist would want his or her customers to be poor. They don't.
there is zero poverty in this hemisphere north of the Rio Grande.
I like the way you think!
Sort of. How much poverty would there be if direct support welfare was removed?
But in that case people would have a lot more incentive to actually do something about their situations.
counting you answering yourself as circumstantial evidence.
How much poverty would there be if direct support welfare was removed?
In the long run, there would be much less. The most effective action we could take to reduce poverty would be to stop subsidizing the reproduction of unmarried indigent women.
Poverty is created by welfare programs and related regulations.
This is the kind of article I expect and seek from Reason. Thanks!
Morons who think yet another tax on my own home helps anything can provide a real analysis or reference. Otherwise phuck off.
Don't forget affordable housing programs.
Let’s see… What causes poverty?
Well once upon a time long long ago doctors would show up at your door for the price of a pizza and houses and land were abundant and paid for in under 10-years if not just paid for by cash.
Then some F’En retards decided the purpose of Gov-Guns was to make a living from them instead of to ensure Liberty and Justice. Now the doctor bankrupts you and so does the house.
You see nothing causes people to lose hope (The American Dream), become criminals/stealers and drug addicts more than Gov-Gun toting dictators telling everyone they can’t do that or handing them what they never earned or stealing everything they have earned.
In a mostly free country with mostly free markets, poverty is at its root cultural. Once you realize cultural behavior is the most important driver of a person's economic position it all makes sense. I can vouch in my own family (grew up in a working class family), the folks who didn't have kids out of wedlock, finished high school and learned a trade or skills (including college degree which was marketable), did fine. Those who blew off school, knocked up woman and didn't learn a skill stayed lower class.
All the poverty program grifter folks should focus on changing their tribe's culture, which was something which was discussed back in the 80s and 90s. Now its easier to blame "discrimination" than culture.
Can't say tribe anymore.
Can't blame the victims of poverty, they (or their ancestors) have been wronged. Although others whose ancestors were wronged to a greater or lesser extent are doing fine now.
As Thomas Sowell would say: there’s NO EXPLANATION NEEDED for poverty. The species began in poverty — it’s the default state of all mankind. What we need to know instead is where WEALTH comes from. We need to know the things that enable some countries, and some groups within countries, to be PROSPEROUS and GENERATE NEW WEALTH, and then find ways to extend those things to the poor instead of simply tearing down existing wealth generators or re-distributing existing wealth. Or in other words, we need to focus on the exact opposite of Desmond’s anti-economic propaganda.
Poverty is the natural state of mankind, living a subsistence life and fighting over access to food and water.
People can lift themselves out of poverty if they apply effort and cooperate, and more so to the extent that the local warlord/government puts fewer restrictions on their ability to build, save, innovate and plan.
I don't usually offer corrective information to articles, but for a guy accusing Desmond of being confused, Aaron Brown's thinking convolutes in such a way as to confuse some basic principles of supply and demand.
Brown's overall sentiment is in accordance with my own, however the claim that construction jobs and housing inventory vary directly is incorrect; they simply don't--they vary inversely. Brown writes, "If the government started taxing homeowners on imputed rental value, homeowning would be less attractive, and home prices would fall. This would reduce construction jobs and housing supply."
If homeowning would become less attractive,we could expect less housing demand, and housing supply would increase (not decrease as Brown suggests). New houses would sit unoccupied, like in the year or so leading up to the 2008 crisis. In turn, increased supply of homes on the market would decrease the need for new homes, and simultaneously decrease the demand for new home construction. This latter fact is what would precede a decrease in construction-related employment.
It seems apparent that when Brown goes on to impute additional homelessness from this "reduced housing supply", his conflates the rental market with the homeowner market. While interactive, these are different markets; when people "switched to renting", the home they previously owned does not disappear from the market altogether--it switches to the rental market too--where it serves to initially increase the rental housing supply. And, by golly, increased rental housing supply drives rental costs down--making housing more affordable to all, including the lowest income people...initially...until a new equilibrium is reached. And, at present, we have no good exemplar for understanding the downstream effects that such legislation would produce en masse.
The sense of Brown's argument is correct, I believe. And, similarly, my own intuitions tells me that Desmond is (wildly) wrong. It seems that Brown started running with a great idea, but got a bit lost in the weeds. Interestingly, Brown criticizes Desmond for lack of rigor and a failure to offer concrete examples, but this article reads similarly to me. By rigor, I do not mean merely including citations that undergird one's own point of view; on the contrary, placing each claim carefully is what creates the strongest foundation for an argument.
The old saw that poverty increased with Johnson's Great Society. Ignoring the fact that US lost a lot of its competitiveness and market leadership after 1964. And he doubts that Big Biz wants workers to be starving, and therefore willing to work at low wages, poor conditions.