Why middle-class Americans can’t afford to live in liberal cities (xpost from GD)
http://qz.com/288753/why-middle-class-americans-cant-afford-to-live-in-liberal-cities/All homeowners have an incentive to stop new housing, Kahn told me, because if developers build too many homes, prices fall, and housing is many families main asset. But in cities with many Democrats and Green Party members, environmental concerns might also be a factor. The movement might be too eager to preserve the past.
The deeper you look, the more complex the relationship between blue cities and unaffordable housing becomes. In 2008, economist Albert Saiz used satellite-generated maps to show that the most regulated housing markets tend to have geographical constraintsthat is, they are built along sloping mountains, in narrow peninsulas, and against natures least developable real estate: the ocean. (By comparison, many conservative cities, particularly in Texas, are surrounded by flatter land.) Democratic, high-tax metropolitan areas tend to constrain new development more, Saiz concluded, and historic areas seem to be more regulated. He also found that cities with high home values tend to have more restrictive development policies.
One could attempt tying this together into a pat storyRich liberals prefer to cluster near historic coastal communities with high home values, where they support high taxes, rent control, and a maze of housing regulations to protect both their investment and the regions character, altogether discouraging new housing development thats already naturally constrained by geography but even that interpretation elides the colorful local history that often shapes housing politics.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)The reason "middle class" people can't afford the big cities is that they're not middle class any more, they're working class and worse.
America needs a RAISE, Kolko. And you need a brain transplant.
This has nothing to do with liberals in big cities. It has everything to do with conservatives in both parties working to depress wages over the past 40 years.
The bills are now due, buddy, and you're going to be asked to pony up to pay them, too.
Lydia Leftcoast
(48,217 posts)the problem is that all the ones near downtown are super-expensive, as in $1000+ for an undistinguished studio. Since I work from home, I'd ideally like to have a 2-bedroom as I do now, but I'd have to pay $2000-4000 for it.
I'd love to live downtown and not drive at all, but I can't afford it. My neighborhood isn't bad. In fact, it's quite pleasant, but getting downtown means either a ride on an undependable bus or driving and looking for parking that isn't too overpriced.
Affordable apartments are being built only in the burbs, where I refuse to live.