Let's say you own a two-family house and live in one of
the apartments with your family. You've always rented the other unit to friends
or family at below-market rates for the area. You're almost certain that these
renters could afford to pay market rates based on their jobs and where they
lived before moving into your house.
Now, let's say you've been reading regular reports about
families in the area struggling to find affordable apartments. Then, you begin
to cross paths with families in your own line of work who desperately want to
live in your neighborhood because it's close to their children's schools,
healthcare providers and other services they use.
Is it wrong to charge below-market rates to those who can
afford to pay more when you know there are families out there in greater need?
A.L., a reader in Boston, posed this question to me
recently. She and her spouse own a two-family house in the city. They rent out
a two-bedroom apartment to work acquaintances for about $250 less a month than
what the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development lists as the averagefair market rent for such a unit in Boston. Comparable apartments in their
neighborhood rent for at least $600 more than the couple is charging.
It's not that A.L. frets about the fact that she and her
spouse could get more money for the apartment. Given that the mortgage is paid
off, they receive more than enough to cover maintenance costs and pocket a nice
profit.
A.L. mentioned that she'd read a new report from
Northeastern University, "The Greater Boston Housing Report Card2014-2015," which includes observations such as, "Working
middle-class families are increasingly being priced out of the region's rental
and homeowner market" and "Low-income households...are increasingly
finding themselves with excessive housing cost burdens and the potential for
homelessness."
Based on the report, A.L. wonders if she and her spouse
should offer their apartment at an affordable rate to a family whose needs are
greater than those of the friends and family to whom they've been renting.
A.L. and her spouse are fortunate that they're able to
show generosity to family and friends by making the apartment available at
below-market rates. It's also admirable that A.L. struggles with questions of fairness
and displacement in the local housing market.
But just as A.L. has no ethical obligation to rent to
friends and family at below-market rates, she also has no obligation to rent to
another family whose needs might be greater. Either choice is admirable.
The right thing is for A.L. and her spouse to do is to
continue to be conscientious landlords and come to an agreement about how much
they want to charge in rent and whether or not to keep the rental in the
family.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Right Thing: Conscience, Profit and Personal Responsibility in Today's Business and The Good, the Bad, and Your Business: Choosing Right When Ethical Dilemmas Pull You Apart, is a lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School.
Follow him on Twitter: @jseglin
Do you have ethical questions that you need answered? Send them to rightthing@comcast.net.
(c) 2014 JEFFREY L. SEGLIN. Distributed by TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC.
2 comments:
There should be no "obligation" to anyone. Should the landlady have a good tenant and pay her bills, this is the most important part. Should she want to charge fair value, it is her choice. Should she wait for a relative and leave it empty, this is her choice. Should she do a "good deed" to a stranger, this is her choice also. It is her possession to do as she feels fit.
There are millions of examples where a good dead reaped rewards. And more millions the other way around. And what is a good deed anyway and who "deserves" it???
None of these has an obligation and she should rest knowing this.
Alan Owseichik
Greenfield, Ma.
I agree with Alan above. The premise sounds like someone trying to do something Obama wants people to do and trying too hard to find a reason to do it, when you know it's not the right thing to do.
Charlie Seng
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