Anecdotally there's a significant problem in the UK with some rural regions becoming significantly hotels for the wealthy. People like them so buy properties as second homes, maybe to live in a 5-10 days a month at maximum and sometimes far less.
The work available locally can't support the prices such customers are willing and able to pay, so the community becomes significantly weighted towards the old (who bought before the prices rose) and the absentee second home owner. This starts reducing the demand for local services (shops, schools, public transport) through a lower active population which makes the community less and less viable for full time living and....
'True markets' may optimise for supply and demand but they don't always for maximum societal good.
Anecdotally there's a significant problem in the UK with some rural regions becoming significantly hotels for the wealthy. People like them so buy properties as second homes, maybe to live in a 5-10 days a month at maximum and sometimes far less.
The work available locally can't support the prices such customers are willing and able to pay, so the community becomes significantly weighted towards the old (who bought before the prices rose) and the absentee second home owner. This starts reducing the demand for local services (shops, schools, public transport) through a lower active population which makes the community less and less viable for full time living and....
'True markets' may optimise for supply and demand but they don't always for maximum societal good.