Don’t Wait for a Job to Come to You

by Will Wilkinson on January 28, 2009

That’s my advice in this morning’s Marketplace for the tens of thousands of Americans who have lost, or are about about to lose, their jobs. I knew this wouldn’t be very popular advice, and I was right. A number of commentators ask “What about the house?” Good question. The policies that subsidized homeownership for millions of Americans for whom it might not otherwise have made economic sense are the same ones that led to the massive misallocation of capital that contributed both to this recession and to the meltdown of the financial sector, which has made the recession worse. That is to say, a Fed policy of low interest rates, home mortgage deductions, the positive encouragement of sub-prime loans, etc., etc. have doubly or triply screwed over huge numbers of Americans. Lots of people are now losing their jobs in part because of stupid homeownership subsidies. The sensible thing to do when you can’t find work locally is to pick up and go where you can find a jobs (and, contrary to one commenter, the fact that unemployment is up in every state doesn’t begin to imply that no one is hiring anywhere.) But if you can’t sell the house at all, or if you have to sell it at a huge loss, that’s obviously going to make it hard to move.

That’s one reason why in the commentary I wanted to emphasize just how terrible it is to be unemployed. In terms of psychological well-being, it really is one of the worst things that can happen to a person. And I undrestand that there are lots of forces that hold people in place. But if we’re not even willing to consider painfully abandoning sunk costs, we can put ourselves in the way of even greater pain.

If government policy can help in these circumstances, it’s going to be policy that encourages mobility, not rootedness. The first thing government can do is to stop subsidizing homeownership in a way that anchors people at precisely the times when they most need to set sail.

  • You get good from a combination of things. You have to wait for things to happen sometimes. You have to wait for opportunities... that is your chance to take them. Good opportunities end when you loose your virtue. Wait for good things and interact so they happen. Some people just wait and never act. Those are the people that get taken advantage of. Be the master of your life.
  • anonymouse
    Unfortunately, what you end up with is not necessarily citizens committed to the community, but citizens committed to maintaining their property values at all costs, whether in the form of NIMBYism, or much nastier things. People tend to become afraid of any change at all to their neighborhood, good or bad, and they tend to use political means to institute various prohibitions on change, because they want to have been the last person to move into the neighborhood.
  • Anonymouse,

    It's not about renting vs owning. I simply used a historical example that seems interesting to me. I'm now renting. It's about living in a community and being part of it. I simply disagree that most people are like you. I lived in a college town for 33 years. The permanent residents were generally far more committed to the community than the students. I moved last year to a new city. It doesn't quite feel like mine yet. I still feel that I might move on. You yourself say that you cared about some, but not all, of the cities you live in. Communities need permanent residents who are committed to the area and locality, friends and institutions, not just a job. I believe that asking, as you say, poor people or unemployed people, to simply uproot themselves when times are hard isn't likely to lead to people who want less government. My view.
    Thanks for the comment,
    Don
  • That’s one reason why in the commentary I wanted to emphasize just how terrible it is to be unemployed. In terms of psychological well-being, it really is one of the worst things that can happen to a person.

    Yes.
  • anonymouse
    Don: I'm just having a really hard time with your ideas here, because the path you're going down leads to all sorts of incredibly nasty things: that the less well off care less about their city because they can only afford to rent, for example. Or that people "not rooted here" lead to bad things. I've spent my life living in many different cities, and I care about several of them a great deal. Deciding which municipal elections to vote in is difficult sometimes. And my social support networks, friends, family, and the like, are all around the world, because frankly, community just doesn't follow geographic lines anymore.
  • Telling people that packing up and leaving is our solution to employment problems sounds sensible, if you believe that there's no social cost to such a policy. One reason that only property owners could vote at one time was the belief that in order to really care about an area, you needed to be rooted to it. Although I'm not justifying such a policy, there was some truth in it. A society of highly mobile people leads not to less government, but more, as social relations fray and people rely more on government to help them, as opposed to family, friends, and the community. A decent social safety net would, paradoxically, allow people to try and remain in an area that they're rooted to. Some movement is of course inevitable, but easing such a transition is a much better path to follow.
  • Number 6
    OF course, there's a Catch-22 here-moving takes money. People who have lost their jobs (especially lower-paying jobs) don't have much money. For them, moving may not be an option.
  • Joe Strummer
    This is fine, but the fact is that since so many people are upside down on their homes, they're anticipating being laid off & being upside down for tens of thousands of dollars on a home. People should move out of certain parts of the country. But it is extremely difficult. What would help is passage of the change to the bankruptcy law that would allow cram downs - letting people declare bankruptcy and forcing mortgage holders to take some of the los themselves.

    But I agree with the larger point that we need to stop subsidizing home ownership.
  • Thank you, Will, for discussing this. In a country as large as ours, people have the distinct advantage of being able to move to areas of relative growth whenever they please. And yet they don't .... and not just because they will take a bath on their over-leveraged home. The cultural and social aspects of labor mobility are something that fascinate me. Why, in a nation of immigrants, don't people just get the hell out of Dodge when things turn south? Clearly, this is an area where family and social networking play a large role in people's decision-making.
blog comments powered by Disqus

Previous post:

Next post: