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by com2kid
682 days ago
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> Now my question is: why does it look like all cities in the area are colluding against this? What keeps even one city from breaking ranks and allowing massive amounts of building? The problem is that until all unmet demand at the upper end of the market has been satisfied, builders won't start building at the more affordable ends of the market. If one small city allows more construction, the overall impact on the market will be tiny, this is why the "urban villages" approach doesn't help bring down housing prices, throwing up a few dozen new apartment complexes doesn't help when thousands upon thousands of new complexes are needed. |
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As outlined in my original comment, I don't see how that is a problem?
The whole point is that you can either you can let your real estate developers run wild and make lots of profit (and thus pay lots of taxes) building houses upon houses upon houses without any price drops from over-supply.
Or you'll eventually see price drops, and thus more affordability.
Btw, back in the old days the complaint was that greedy developers would build sub-par units to make money off poor people. Nowadays the complaint is that greedy developers will only sell nice units to the rich. How times have changed.
Any new supply is good. If you don't supply excellent units at the top, you just have rich people outbid the middle class for slightly worse (but still nice) units. And the middle class gets pushed down to outbid the lower class for even worse units.
The other way round, adding units at the top allows everyone on the ladder to move up one rung. All the way to the bottom.
Developers should just concentrate on whatever's most profitable.
> If one small city allows more construction, the overall impact on the market will be tiny, [...]
That's the first of the two cases I outlined above. I would also classify that as a (local) success of allowing more housing.
Being able to add lots of supply to an over-priced market without that dropping prices, is every suppliers' dream.