Quote:
Originally Posted by scryer
Nobody is going to stick around 50 years just to buy and live in Vancouver. People have lives to live. A slow deflation will have the youth scurrying like rats to other cities. Vancouver can grow its economy but it's not going to have anyone working it unless they want to employ the elderly.
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Fundamentally I agree - but youth are willing to tough it out for a shot to stay in cities. Its the missing middle that's the bigger worry - IE, professional 30 year old's that don't want to be paying sky high for 470 square feet.
Nearly the whole of West Coast is now severely unaffordable, Vancouver might have the gold star, but most Cities are now ridiculously expensive.
I always try to make my way down to LA - its the same thing down there, different capital flows displacing people, increased homelessness, sky high rents, and property prices through the roof.
Seattle, LA, San Diego, San Fran - not cheap places to live by any stretch, and some of them offer the highest wages on the West Coast.
If I was guessing, this probably looks like the late 90's. Capital exodus after a run up, and 5-6 years of deflating prices. 20% down or so, plus benefit of inflation and wage growth.
Definitely enough incentive to make many dip their toes and buy, and probably even enough for some to move back from the arctic tundra of Alberta.