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David Muccigrosso's avatar

I think your list is unsatisfying because you don’t factor in actual supply restrictions.

The AMA restricts the supply of new doctors.

College accreditation boards have been captured by the professional administrative class and used as vehicles for abject featherbedding.

Day care seems cost-diseased by land use restrictions.

I think these really help explain the missing piece better. Not ALL of it, but MOST of what’s missing.

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Simon Cast's avatar

I think you might have missed the impact of location and consequently the price of real estate (purchase or renting). The services you mentioned can only be produced close to their market. Most physical goods can be produced in a location that is far cheaper in real estate and then shipped to the market cheaper than if it was produced closed to the market.

Hospitals, universities/colleges, child care has to be close to either were people live, people work or along the path between the two. That in general means higher cost base due to real estate and also higher cost base for works (pushing up their salary demands).

It also largely goes for restaurants as well. They have to be in costly locations. Dark kitchens and the like would put downward pressure on prices since those can be located away from were people congregate.

Other services such as laundry and hair cutting I suspect you are seeing the impact of smaller popup stores, door-to-door service (laundry pickup/dropoff and hair cutting at home etc) and other ways of reducing the reliance on expensive real estate.

My hypothesis is that you reduce the real estate costs (purchase, rent and business rates) would make a significant impact on the costs of these services. Add in reducing zoning restrictions (why can't people run a laundry or hair cutting service from home like in Japan?) would also go a long way to reducing the costs of the services.

Being back and forth for a while between UK and Poland, I've always been struck by how much the cost of real estate (purchase, rent, development) impacts the cost of living/cost of business.

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