• grey_maniac@lemmy.ca
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    4 hours ago

    I am going to need some explanations. First, they say there are 510 dwellings per 1000 adults, and then they say there are 1017 dwellings per 1000 households. In the first number, that requires more than two adults per dwelling. That deems like we haven’t hit demand yet, let alone surplus. The second numbers are only possible if there are hundreds of thousands of extra adults beyond a couple in most households. Or hundreds of thousands of homeless adults. None of those imply to me any kind of surplus. So I don’t see a source of downward pressure based on over supply. If those 17 dwellings per thousand households are sitting empty, and we have homeless people, then either those 17 are uninhabitable, or they are unaffordable relative to the mode or median incomes.

    Why doesn’t increasing affordable supply help solve that issue?

    The solution suggestions do make sense, it is the argument that there isn’t a supply shortage that has missing pieces.

    • justOnePersistentKbinPlease@fedia.io
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      3 hours ago

      Because the only viable way to increase supply is to have a public construction company that builds at cost.

      And thanks to Alberta and US media, that will never fly.

  • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    That’s a pretty damning argument. I knew most parts of it but never put all of them together like this. Does anyone find anything obviously wrong with it?