Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack
This is also the general direction I see most western societies heading in...
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There was a lot of debate about this when Capital in the 21st Century came out a few years ago. Basically the debate is whether the total return on capital exceed economic growth. If it does, the rich get richer over time (if they keep their level of consumption below the difference).
Then after this someone came out with a paper that pointed out that, in the United States, post World War II, high returns on housing alone account for a big share on capital returns and the gap between returns and economic growth.
In a sense this is good news in that housing prices are much more fixable than a vague trend toward wealth accumulation.
In another way it's depressing because this has been going on for decades, has reached ridiculous proportions in many places (e.g. California), and given the political situation there are no immediate signs of anything changing.
There is a "boiling frog" angle to this which is that housing has been getting more expensive practically everywhere, even in traditionally cheap cities (e.g. Montreal or Edmonton; they are cheaper than 2018 Toronto but on par with late-90's Toronto). There is no good reason for this. Even if a city becomes more desirable housing costs can be kept low.