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by Finnucane
3708 days ago
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The large demographic trend for the last few decades is that people are moving away from the center and toward the coast. Right now, about 40 percent of the US population lives in a county right on the coast, and that number is sill going up. For a variety of reasons--the industries that held the middle--agriculture and heavy manufacturing--don't employ as many people as before. The centers of media and finance are in port cities. So, in a sense, we don't have a housing problem, we have a distribution problem. The long-term environmental and infrastructure pressures on the coast are going to get worse, and no amount of new housing is going to change that, in fact, it contributes to it getting worse. So yeah, you'd think there'd be opportunity there for cities to encourage startups and other businesses in need of relatively cheap space, if they can develop the culture and infrastructure needed to support it. Cities that have good academic centers and sources of funding are probably in the best position. |
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