After weeks of waiting, California’s governor signed a bill that will allow mid-rise apartment buildings near major transit stops in California’s biggest metro areas.
increasing the supply is a good way to decrease pressure on the market
Bullshit, real estate developers and finance institutions have sucked up enough of our wealth at this pont that normal supply and demand stuff doesn’t work, they just ride off of loans collateralized by properties that have nonsense sky-high valuations even though most of their units are empty, until reality finally catches up and the bubble burst and then we have to bail them out because they’re too big to fail
We need more housing, but if it isn’t completely publicly owned housing or locked down with rent controls we’re just going to be demolishing neighborhoods to build more luxury bullshit real people won’t be able to afford and enriching douchebag landlords and land developers who are going to pump their wealth into fascist political movements
Supply and demand are not 100% representative of market realities due to externalities, as you say. But there is a market and that market is responsive on some level (even sublinearly) to supply and demand. This is not a solution to the problem but it is a step in the right direction. Where do you want public housing to be built, next to rail lines or in the middle of nowhere? This legislation makes it possible to build public housing near rail lines by getting rid of zoning laws that previously prohibited it. Take the small wins where you can.
You see a dark cloud in this silver lining. You dont have to. Doomerism doesnt motivate action, it dissuades it.
Bullshit, real estate developers and finance institutions have sucked up enough of our wealth at this pont that normal supply and demand stuff doesn’t work, they just ride off of loans collateralized by properties that have nonsense sky-high valuations even though most of their units are empty, until reality finally catches up and the bubble burst and then we have to bail them out because they’re too big to fail
We need more housing, but if it isn’t completely publicly owned housing or locked down with rent controls we’re just going to be demolishing neighborhoods to build more luxury bullshit real people won’t be able to afford and enriching douchebag landlords and land developers who are going to pump their wealth into fascist political movements
Supply and demand are not 100% representative of market realities due to externalities, as you say. But there is a market and that market is responsive on some level (even sublinearly) to supply and demand. This is not a solution to the problem but it is a step in the right direction. Where do you want public housing to be built, next to rail lines or in the middle of nowhere? This legislation makes it possible to build public housing near rail lines by getting rid of zoning laws that previously prohibited it. Take the small wins where you can.
You see a dark cloud in this silver lining. You dont have to. Doomerism doesnt motivate action, it dissuades it.