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paconbork | 2 years ago

With you until the last sentence. The high prices for small condos in urban centers are an indication that there are fewer of them in supply relative to what the market demands. There's nothing wrong with letting urban centers densify and serve as a containment zone for childless 20-somethings (in fact, this would mean more affordable single family homes for those that need them). And who knows, if there's enough dense urban housing to meet demand, then those residents could have an easier saving up money themselves, with which to later purchase some more space in which to raise a family

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robocat|2 years ago

> The high prices for small condos in urban centers are an indication that there are fewer of them in supply relative to what the market demands.

Be careful trying to apply ECON101 micro principles when looking at property markets: property markets are neither efficient, nor rational.

> those residents could have an easier saving up money themselves

In desirable property markets, people bid against each other as much as they can afford to pay for a mortgage - so your cause and effect is wrong - most people don’t get to save. Same analyses if renting, because landlords and renters do much the same behaviour. You get to save if (a) you are an undesirable market or time, or (b) your wages are enough to beat the majority, or (c) you stay in a lower status home compared to your peers.

paconbork|2 years ago

People bidding whatever they can afford is largely a lack-of-supply problem, is it not? If more housing of a given status level were available, eventually it wouldn't be necessary for everyone to spend everything they can on bidding wars. And sure, then you might say "well then the relative status of that housing has shifted and your peers still aren't saving, they're just spending their money on nicer housing", but I still see that as an absolute win. I have much more empathy for a person not saving money when saving money means "living in a dump and commuting 90 minutes each way" than when it means "living more than half an hour away from Central Park".

cyberax|2 years ago

> The high prices for small condos in urban centers are an indication that there are fewer of them in supply relative to what the market demands.

Here's a simple fact. Densification never leads to lower prices. As you build more housing, it _always_ becomes more expensive faster than you can build it.

I analyzed the database of all real estate sales in the US for the last 25 years, and I have not found a single example where densification led to price drops. Other scholarly literature found similar results, at most you can expect single-digit percentage drops on rents from new construction.

> There's nothing wrong with letting urban centers densify

Yes, there is. Densification forces jobs to migrate to urban centers, because companies in dense cores have a competitive advantage in the access to a larger pool of talent.

So your choices are:

1. Densify to hell and then in a couple of generations your children will live in apartments where you can shit into your toilet, while cooking food at the same time. See: microapartments in Tokyo.

2. Limit density and promote suburban lifestyle.

That's it. It's not a false dilemma, there are really no in-between choices that are stable long-term.

swexbe|2 years ago

You have the cause and effect reversed. Areas densify because they become more expensive. This is the classic “more medicine causes higher mortality” Simpson's paradox.

Edit: Also, looking at one country for less than a generation is not conclusive enough to make a general rule.

scelerat|2 years ago

I’ll take Tokyo over the car-dependent sprawl of the suburbs. That’s a really easy choice to make