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David Muccigrosso's avatar

Noah, I think you're wrong about PHIMBY. I'd LOVE for it to be a "Why not do both?" thing, and to whatever extent that it is, I *do* agree with you.

But the plain fact is -- as Matt pointed out -- that the PHIMBYs themselves are NOT selling this as a "Why not do both?". Rather, it's a lot of tankies and other crypto-socialists engaging in blatant checkism -- just get government to write a big enough check, and the problem will go away, right? They're explicitly saying that NO regulatory reform is needed, because they're just going to fix everything with [definitely NOT Soviet] housing blocks.

Public housing keeps running into the same roadblocks as private housing. The problem isn't whether it's public or private, it's the roadblocks. And happily, we will GET both by destroying the roadblocks! But public housing has such a politically toxic reputation in the US that it doesn't have a snowball's chance of destroying the roadblocks for us. No, WE need to destroy the roadblocks for IT.

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kjw's avatar

I have a maybe coherent theory of greedflation. It goes like this:

All companies are always trying to raise prices. However, they usually raise prices at different times. This means that all their competitors are not raising prices, and they are forced to lower them again.

However, when inflation strikes, it causes an indirect synchronization effect. The news of high inflation gives all companies in a market a signal to raise prices at the same time. Because all the companies in a market raised prices at once, the usual competitive forces that would push the price back down are not as quick to respond.

So while companies are not uniquely greedy in times of inflation, the inflation signal creates a temporary coordination effect.

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