They keep raising prices, stating that it’s due to inflation, but then they keep having record profits.

Meanwhile, the average American can barely afford rent or food nowadays.

What are we to do? Vote? I have been but that doesn’t seem to do much since I’m just voting for a representative that makes the actual decisions.

  • SCB@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    This is specifically about Australia, but essentially all 3 parts of this piece (and related linked essays) sum up how to solve the housing crisis worldwide.

    https://theemergentcity.substack.com/p/how-to-solve-housing-unaffordability

    Boils down to:

    1: change zoning laws to allow more multifamily construction

    2: remove incentives for homeownership and generally disincentivize single family homes

    3: build for density in ways that reinforce and support density

    If you want more info, basically every mainstream economist in the world agrees this is the solution, and that this is a manufactured problem. It’s a result of regulatory capture by homeowners, essentially. There are many, many papers about it.

    Here’s an easily-digestible article

    https://www.businessinsider.com/economist-how-to-fix-america-housing-crisis-rural-cities-2022-10

    And a well-cited study in an economic journal:

    https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/mje/2022/12/30/the-economics-of-the-housing-shortage/

    All these sources agree, because this is the solution. Realistically, the only bad solutions are subsidizing more demand via things like rent control - these will only make our problems worse, kind of like how adding more lanes to a highway doesn’t fix traffic.

    • TheIllustrativeMan@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      1: change zoning laws to allow more multifamily construction

      Our city did this and it hasn’t helped at all, because banks won’t finance it. No minimum parking, no height limit, no maximum FAR, no maximum unit count.

      • SCB@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        No minimum parking, no height limit, no maximum FAR, no maximum unit count.

        yeah get rid of these next and you’re set.

        It’s gonna take a lot of work, man. The regulatory capture here is extreme.

        Everyone wants to point to capitalism for this, but this is what happens when you kneecap any economic system. That’s why it’s all over the world.

        • TheIllustrativeMan@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          That’s what I’m saying though, we got rid of those regulations, and it still doesn’t matter. Banks want parking. Banks limit height. Banks limit unit counts. Developers routinely propose some pretty decent housing products, where they’ve run the numbers and they work, then go to get it financed and it very rapidly gets cut in half and turned to shit.

          The only solution is for the city to finance and build themselves.