Yeah, that... isn't happening. I mean, they are building, but not in the amounts that would be expected. Property development companies in London are buying huge chunks of land speculatively and just sitting on it, waiting for the price to rise; and what building there is tends to be aimed at foreigners who want a place in London, so the prices are based on the income of the wealthy from Beijing and Rio rather than that of the locals. There is little expansion of supply to meet demand. It's a market failure, mostly because investors and landlords are sociopaths but also partly we have a political system where it is political suicide to suggest anything but the harshest of winner-take-all capitalism.Kaelik wrote:What the fuck do you think is a scare good? I mean, 1) You are wrong, if the price of housing magically doubles because everyone is a huge fucking dick and the UK is too stupid to have fucking rent controls, then still you will get more fucking housing. Because the price for housing just fucking doubled, so people who previously didn't rent out their rooms and shit are now going to, and people who previously wanted to turn their plot of land into a corporate office are instead going to turn it into an apartment complex.Laertes wrote:In London where I live, the archetypical scarce good is housing: there is straight up not enough for everyone to rent their own place. As a result the rents have risen until they exclude a large enough proportion of the population. That's basic supply and demand pricing. If the income of minimum wage workers rises, then they will still be competing over the same finite housing stock, meaning that rents will rise until the same number of people are excluded. (It won't cause significantly more supply to be added either, because new building in London is dominated by the wealthy of other countries wanting a place in London rather than affordable places for locals.)
That's what I meant. Is this the case for all scarce goods or is housing an abberation; and if so why?
Yeah... about that. See, an hour out of London is called "still inside London." Two hours out of London is called "the stockbroker belt" and is where extremely wealthy people live. The commuter zone around London is more expensive than the urban area itself. As such, migrating out is generally not an option.2) You are wrong because if housing prices magically double in london then everyone who could have possible afforded a slightly less costly place than double are going to be able to pay for transportation and rent further out.
Okay, I'll name a second. Children's education in Britain.3) You seriously just made an overly simplistic inflationary argument based on interior London housing scarcity and then asked what about "other scarce goods." Name a second scarce good. It isn't cars, it isn't food, it isn't consumer goods like tvs, it isn't entertainment, it isn't.... anything at all.
See, British middle class people are horrified by one thing above all: that their children will go to a school where the children of proles go. Especially if those proles are (shock, horror) ethnic minorities. As a result they pay through the nose for schools which exclude such children: a single place at an independent British school costs more than the average pre-tax salary. This is intentional: the pricing is designed to keep it unaffordable to those whose children are considered undesirable.
Sadly, because such schools have lots of money, they also tend to hoover up all the good teachers from the state system, leading to a drop in the education quality for everyone else. This aggravates the problem because it intensifies the flight from the state school system.
This can't be written off as a "only rich people do it so who cares" factor, because spending money on their childrens' schools tends to be one of the very first things that people do when their income increases and they start to see themselves as rising in class. (That and buying a house.) If lower waged people were to get wealthier, then those who are already the better off amongst the lower waged would be pushed into the bracket where, culturally, they would expect to be able to buy their children a better education.
Therefore, if the buying power of the poor increased, then the price of posh schools would increase by precisely the same amount in order to keep them unaffordable. I don't know how this would knock on to the rest of the country - I imagine in a bad way, since it would make the financial difference between wealthy schools and state schools even worse, but I don't know. You know more about this than I do, so I'd be interested to hear your take.
Considering that housing costs the average British family as much as everything else they consume put together (that being what "half your income" means), I would posit that rent inflation is plenty to be worried about.Yes, Real Property is often times less supply elastic than most other things (though see above, not as inelastic as you suppose) so? What other super scare goods are you worried about inflating? Hamburgers are maximally supply elastic. TVs are maximally supply elastic.
I wish Britain had rent control laws. I really do. But as it stands we have a system whereby rich people pay for their retirement by taking their savings and buying a house, then charging poor people to live in it. That's unlikely to change, no matter how much I might like it to.Everyone everywhere who is poor spends most of their money on housing. But you know what, who gives a crap. Tenancy is the least price elastic good in the universe. You sign a contract for like a year, at any given time half the people get at least 6 months of the old price even if the landlord really really wants to double the price. Because everyone else is still getting the old price, he can't even get the new market of double right away, he has to slowly phase the price up over months and years in offers to even new customers. And that is not even taking into account actual fucking rent control laws.
As for rents being inelastic: yes they are, but supply seems to be not just inelastic but simply non-responsive to market signals (or rather, responds to the signals of the international market rather than the domestic market.) Hence my question to you of how it gets affected by a basic income. I don't know this stuff. You appear to. I am not challenging you; I'm trying to learn from you.