By Futurist Thomas Frey
America spends approximately $50-70 billion annually on homelessness through federal, state, and local programs, nonprofits, emergency services, law enforcement, and healthcare. Major cities spend $40,000-80,000 per homeless person annually. Yet homelessness has increased in most major urban areas over the past decade. Tent cities expand. Encampments grow. The crisis seems perpetual despite massive spending.
AI analysis of homelessness spending, service delivery, outcomes, and alternative approaches is revealing something deeply troubling: a system that has evolved to manage homelessness rather than solve it. Where service providers are financially incentivized to maintain client populations rather than reduce them. Where coordination failures create massive duplication and waste. Where the most effective interventions are systematically underfunded while ineffective traditional approaches consume the majority of resources.
The awakening in homelessness services isn’t about whether we should help people experiencing homelessness—we obviously should. It’s about revealing that the systems we’ve built to address homelessness often serve the institutions providing services more than the people they’re supposed to help. And AI can now track individuals through multiple service systems, analyze spending versus outcomes, and compare approaches to reveal what actually works versus what perpetuates the problem it claims to solve.
Continue reading… “The Awakening Series Part 15: Homelessness Services—The Perpetual Crisis Industry”
