Slashdot Mirror


Mobile Homes Are So Expensive Now, Hurricane Victims Can't Afford Them (bloomberg.com)

An anonymous reader shares a report: Hurricane victims emerging from ravaged trailer parks are discovering that the U.S. mobile-home market has left them behind. In Florida and Texas, dealerships are swarmed by buyers looking to rebuild their lives after hurricanes Harvey and Irma, but many leave disappointed. The industry, led by Warren Buffett's Clayton Homes, is peddling such pricey interior-designer touches as breakfast bars and his-and-her bathroom sinks. These extras, plus manufacturers' increased costs for labor and materials, have pushed average prices for new double-wides up more than 20 percent in five years, putting them out of reach for many of the newly homeless.

9 of 252 comments (clear)

  1. Re:"The Dow is at record-breaking levels" by RedK · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Late-stage capitalism is when you can't afford the rope to hang yourself, but your #MAGA hat is subsidized.

    That's not Capitalism.

    Capitalism would be someone finding a way to make the ropes cheaper and selling them to you, and including a #MAGA hat for free in order to bolster the sale.

    Just as with this mobile homes situation. Communism just means the state is stuck buying "His and Hers sinks" for everyone and thus overpaying, lining the pockets of some friend of the party. Capitalism means a business opportunity for someone to make a 20% cheaper model to serve the increased demand and thus carve himself a new niche.

    Of course, it helps to put "Trump Derangement Syndrome" aside, since this has nothing to do with Trump.

    --
    "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
    Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
  2. This doesn't ring true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I live an hour north of Houston. Daily on the way to and from work, I pass 4 or 5 mobile home dealerships. About 6 months ago, my wife and I went and looked at a couple of dealerships and priced several mobile homes, as we are thinking about downsizing, buying our own land and living in a mobile home to save money.

    What we learned:

    - A non-luxury single wide with 3 bedrooms is about $30,000.
    - A non-luxury double wide with 3 bedrooms is about $45,000.
    - A luxury double wide with 3-4 bedrooms runs from $65-120,000.

    I can understand people wanting to have a nice place to live, but there is no shame in living in a starter mobile home until you can get back on your feet. For far less than a house these days, one can guy 3 acres for $60,000 and the mobile home for $30,000. That's $90,000. Ad $10,000 for connecting to electricity and sewer, and another $10,000 for a septic system. $110,000 gets you land and a place to live for far, far less than a house. If you choose to buy a mobile home without land, here in this area, the land rental with hookups will run you about $300-400 a month. A cheaper mobile home runs about $300 a month mortgage and $300-400 a month for land rental and in your in for $700. Add $300 for all utilities and you're in for $1000 a month.

    I ran all the above numbers with the sales people at the mobile home dealership. I also know someone living in one and I asked them to verify.

    When I get closer to retirement, I'm considering it because why have to always work on a house and a perfect lawn. I'll get a mobile home and just live with less and less maintenance.

    There is a stigma associated with living in a mobile home, but those who would judge you for living in one are not worthy of your friendship.

  3. This is not correct by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    saying this implies the cost of Mobile homes has gone up. Manufacturing costs are way, way down. The actual problem is that 30 years of wage stagnation has reduced the buying power of working class people. They can't afford basic shelter.

    This is a classic example of an anti-worker wing narrative at work. The breakfast bar adds $200 to the cost of the home. The his and her sinks $500. The cost of the home goes up $10,000. Nobody talks about the $9,200 gap or why people can't afford it. The implication is that poor people are being frivolous with their money, which in turn implies they have low moral character which in turn gives the middle class and rich a reason to abandon them to their poverty because, after all, it's their fault for having low moral character. It's prosperity gospel without the tinge of religion.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re: This is not correct by bradley.uffner2292 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The stupid part is that it's actually true. This country is in full blown, barely non-violent, class war. Somehow the rich got the poor and middle-class to pick sides and fight each other like it was some kind of football game, except with very real consequences.

  4. People who live in glass houses... by Comboman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you live on the gulf coast or tornado alley, maybe a mobile home isn't your best bet. The main reason the price or new units is so high is because the supply of used units suddenly dropped, forcing people who would have bought a used unit to buy a new one.

    --
    Support Right To Repair Legislation.
  5. Re:"The Dow is at record-breaking levels" by jedidiah · · Score: 5, Informative

    > Why would communism mean that?

    Human nature. Government control actually means less accountability and a greater opportunity for corruption. Efficiency is not required. Effectiveness isn't even required. You have no recourse if something sucks. You can't sue or take your business some place else.

    All monopolies are bad for pretty much the same reasons.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  6. Cheaper models still being advertised as always by raymorris · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The low-end models are still there, as always. More expensive models are also available, which increases the AVERAGE price.

        The manufacturers haven't abandoned their primary market, people who are broke because they have don't think long-term, so they do things like spend a ton of money on something that falls apart in a few years rather than putting 10% down on a house which will go up in value.

  7. Re:Good. by HornWumpus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most 'shed banning' is done by HOAs. _Never_ buy a HOA property, it's just that simple.

    Unless of course you're an 'HOA person', than fuck you...we'll both be happier living as far apart as possible.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  8. Re: AFTER the drug's patent expired??!! by backslashdot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Insulin is cheap to make. You can do it with less than $100k of equipment bought new or slightly used. Insulin can be produced using bacteria grown in bioreactors â" and they have a good yield. Iâ(TM)ve seen it being made, and understand the entire process. The problem really is the market entry requirements.

    The microprocessors being used in computers today are much more advanced and require far more capital intensive manufacturing equipment than what was used 2 decades ago â" yet the cost has reduced. There is even a DIY Open Insulin project of people making their own insulin. The insulin we have today has changed only slightly over the years (donâ(TM)t buy any BS that itâ(TM)s dramatically better), but the cost has skyrocketed. Obviously some nefarious force other than laissez faire competition is at work.