| Maybe instead of more housing we should look at fewer people? How many IS sustainable? Can we incentivize a lower population overall? |
Do your kids go to summer camp? How much $$ do you think a camp worker makes? |
Build a wall around metro DC!! |
really dumb brexit-level thinking here. |
This is the way. The problem is the entire economy is based on endless growth, so there would be an "adjustment" at first. |
According to DCUM, Montgomery County is an imploding hellhole that everybody is fleeing from, so if that's true, you're all set! |
Long-term this looks like what's happening naturally. Birthrates are down pretty much everywhere. It probably won't happen fast enough to have a huge impact on housing issues before we die, but US population will probably start declining in our grandchildren's lifetimes. |
If you grew up in the county and want to now raise your family in the county that is growth. If your parents moved to the county that was growth too. If your kids one day want to have their families in the county, that is growth as well. And not to mention the fact that other people wanting to live here is also growth. All of this is good. All sorts of problems come with de-growth -- deficits, decaying and incorrectly sized infrastructure, deferred maintenance, etc... |
The US's one weird trick is that a sizeable chunk of the world wants to live here, stymying DCUM commenters that want this to be a miserable degrowth society |
Even the places that send immigrants to the US have declining growth rates. Population decline is almost certainly coming for the whole world, including the US. |
Ok. Can we have density while you await your inevitable miserable heaven? |
Listen, I'm not just talking about what the numbers show is happening. I'm not suggesting any kind of policy one way or another or describing anything as heaven. |
No. |