Evictions and Climate Disasters Drove U.S. Homelessness Spikes from 2019 to 2024
Posted by thinkB4WeSpeak@reddit | collapse | View on Reddit | 6 comments
Chart-Ordinary@reddit
Add to that higher cases of domestic violence when the temperature rises. It's yet another symptom of a heating planet.
Dondontootles@reddit
Wealth hoarding helped a lot too.
Blood-PawWerewolf@reddit
And don’t forget about the mass layoffs
StatementBot@reddit
The following submission statement was provided by /u/thinkB4WeSpeak:
A UCLA and John Hopkins study shows that climate disasters are increasing homelessness across the US. While in turn eviction protections are doing the opposite. As climate disasters like wildfires, flooding, and hurricanes rise we might see an even bigger amount of people becoming homeless. The start of climate migration has been happening but it's so subtle that it's hardly noticed.
Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/collapse/comments/1sf5ytq/evictions_and_climate_disasters_drove_us/oev0phg/
NyriasNeo@reddit
I read the paper. It is a healthcare paper, so I am not too surprised when the econometrics is pretty rudimentary. There are two main issues with the paper.
Table 2 has all the regression result. First, rent and unemployment has no significant whatsoever. That is very counterintuitive. Typically situation like this, the authors need to probe into why. Otherwise, the whole thing may be just a big mis-specification.
Secondly, there is no test of colinearity (or do I miss that?). If things are colinear (and I expect rent and eviction moratorium to be, as the decision is endogenous), coefficients can have much high fluctuation and be deceptive. This is well known.
In fact, there may be endogeneity issues, as omitted variable bias (an latent econ variable driving both homelessness and some of the covariate) is very possible here. I am not saying there is. I am saying the paper did not even check.
But again, I use much more stringent econometrics standard to look at the paper than typical healthcare reviewers, not that the criticisms are not valid.
thinkB4WeSpeak@reddit (OP)
A UCLA and John Hopkins study shows that climate disasters are increasing homelessness across the US. While in turn eviction protections are doing the opposite. As climate disasters like wildfires, flooding, and hurricanes rise we might see an even bigger amount of people becoming homeless. The start of climate migration has been happening but it's so subtle that it's hardly noticed.