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by mikekchar 3652 days ago
But it's also very important to understand that there is a ceiling. There will be a point at which Silicon Valley startups will stop increasing salaries. People will no longer be able to buy a house. Demand will drop and so will prices. If this occurs at the same time interest rates rise, people will not be able to afford to renew their mortgage and the house of cards will tumble. If the prices are really high and nobody has paid off any of the capital on their properties (as in London in 1991/92 and Tokyo where people had multi-generational mortgages), people will not be able to afford to sell because they owe more than they can sell the house for. But they will be forced to sell because they can't afford the new mortgage. There will be a rash of personal bankruptcies and unless someone steps in, very, very nasty things will happen. In London, the Japanese bought up the land (ironically just before their bubble burst). In Tokyo the government stepped in.

I don't know when, but everything is lined up "nicely". Ridiculously low interest rates, sky high prices, insane salaries. Even if SV companies move to a cheaper location to save on salaries it could trigger the collapse. Seriously not looking forward to a time when the fed raises interest rates to protect a falling dollar... Etc.

1 comments

Oh, definitely.

That's why I am in favour of taxing land values (as a proxy for unearned land rent), and the central bank targeting nominal GDP levels.

The former policy dampens land price bubbles and raises taxes in the most economically efficient way possible; the latter avoids real shocks in one part of the economy taking the whole house of cards down.

Ideally, no single company would then be too big to fail.

http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2015/04/land-val...

http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2011/10/monetary...