| > What has happened is Airbnb which has made it viable to take a significant portion of the housing stock off the regular market. Suppose this is true. Then you replace that portion of the housing stock with new construction, and what problem is there? The problem is only if you're constrained from doing that. > The other thing is that rents going up dramatically is a global phenomenon There have been two major recent drivers of housing demand. One, the interest rates that until COVID were near-zero (which is a global phenomenon because capital markets are global). Two, since COVID, work from home causing people to move around and shift where the demand is. Also a global phenomenon. Both of these can drive short-term increases in rents on the order of a few years, but they should also drive new construction, and then once the construction has caught up to the demand the rents would go back down. Unless the construction isn't allowed to happen. > The argument that high rents are mainly due to large regulations and lack of building is largely not supported by the evidence. It very much is. You can take any two cities and account for things like median income and population density and when you're done you'll consistently find that the one with more restrictive zoning has higher rent. |
AirBnB and the boom of private tourism rental is transforming city centers in the former. New housing is constructed, just on the outskirts of these cities and push people off the city. This is bad for the dymamic of the city, this is bad for the environment when people pushed outside of city centers usually have to resort to drive to go to work...where they used to live, this is bad for kids and becomes a health issue when kids can't walk to school anynore and this is even ultimately bad for tourism itself as these places lose their soul and every single restaurant becomes a shitty tourist trap where no effort is needed or made in term of quality and service.