I've heard that there are many eviction cases that the PJ party essentially ignored that are finally being processed under Milei and that this could be reflected in the growing percentage of homeless. I'm not sure where the stats on that would be though.
seems like a libertarian pipe dream to me.
The City claims to have evicted 520 odd properties in the last year or so.
Not all were residential, and some of the largest ones have been squatted for up to 30 years, several for 10 years or more.
The total number of people squatting who were evicted is probably less than the increase in homeless, and that would assume zero of the squatters actually had jobs, families, or other places to go, which is unlikely.
I live in Retiro, and pass a dozen or so homeless people every day on a short walk- and I would say 90% of them are under 30 males.
A couple of years ago, there was a single woman in the neighborhood, sleeping rough, but she has moved on.
I do see a couple of mothers with small children asking for change, but never see them sleeping on the sidewalk.
My suspicicion is that there are more homeless women and children, but they are better served by charities, and are more willing to spend the night in places that forbid drinking and drugs, so you see them less on the street.
I think the general tightening of the economy, and the increase in prices for food, is a bigger cause, especially in people who are irregularly employed, making the equivalent of $100 to $200 a month for a family, and living in cheap rentals in the conurbano- they are probably more likely to be homeless now than 2 years ago.
I also think that Milei's gutting of the rent control and tenant laws 2 years ago had a far bigger effect on homelessness, as many people I know had their rents double or triple when he changed the regulations.
Some moved in with aging parents, some shared apartments when previously they had their own places, some moved out of the city, to cheaper places.
There was a recorded bump in homelessness right after the rent law change, in 2023, percentage wise about as big as in the last year.
Remember that while overall inflation is calculated based on a basket of products and services, rents went up by something like 300% at that time, and lower raises in, say, the cost of carne or coca cola masked that in the overall inflation rate.