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by forgetfreeman
4 days ago
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"This is absolutely false, not true, disproven, and made up." Someone should tell the local housing market that then, because this pattern has consistently manifest over the last 20 years here. Without exception everyone I've seen make this claim isn't invested in residential real estate and hasn't closely watched how prices shift in response to new construction. In any event if you're trying to advance the claim that gentrification is a myth you're going to need to bring some serious proof to back that. |
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https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44914153
It is rather fascinating that you would bring up a "gentrification is a myth claim," why would you try to insert that into my mouth?
Gentrification happens all throughout the US, but in the current era it's from the under discussed type from the original literature in the 1970s: through lack of construction. When there's not enough housing to go around, prices rise, wealthier people are the only ones who win the bidding war, etc etc. See Boyle Heights in LA for a classic example of this. No new buildings, massive gentrification because there's not enough housing to go around.
See also in LA for the neighborhoods where prices are not rising: the only places they are building lots of apartments.
Perhaps there was some era when the "rent gap" style of gentrification was actually prevalent, but it hasn't been that way for decades. It's all just shortage driven gentrification in every example I have been pointed to in recent times.