Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure....it's remote work. It couldn't be artificial inflation of property values due to interest rates, low supplies because builders didn't build for 20 years, nor the restrictive zoning laws everywhere that make it impossible to build affordable homes.
HOAs should be banned from existence for starters.
When home prices go up 3x or more, and all the new buyers are from NY… that’s the reason, not restrictive zoning.
do locals not have bootstraps?
Your schadenfreude is misplaced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. I also telework but I stayed in my own house. Sadly, I can’t ever move now. I don’t make NYC or CA salaries and live in a low COL area that locals are now locked out of.
I think a lot of people are forced to stay put in their current house because interest rates shot up, making monthly payments go up by like $1,000.
Before that, people were forced to stay out in their current house because housing prices were increasingly rapidly because of artificially low interest rates.
Before that, housing prices were out of control because of creative financing, backed by the government.
The housing economy you grew up in has not been attainable for nearly 30 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure....it's remote work. It couldn't be artificial inflation of property values due to interest rates, low supplies because builders didn't build for 20 years, nor the restrictive zoning laws everywhere that make it impossible to build affordable homes.
HOAs should be banned from existence for starters.
When home prices go up 3x or more, and all the new buyers are from NY… that’s the reason, not restrictive zoning.
do locals not have bootstraps?
Anonymous wrote:Sure....it's remote work. It couldn't be artificial inflation of property values due to interest rates, low supplies because builders didn't build for 20 years, nor the restrictive zoning laws everywhere that make it impossible to build affordable homes.
HOAs should be banned from existence for starters.
Anonymous wrote:OP. I also telework but I stayed in my own house. Sadly, I can’t ever move now. I don’t make NYC or CA salaries and live in a low COL area that locals are now locked out of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure....it's remote work. It couldn't be artificial inflation of property values due to interest rates, low supplies because builders didn't build for 20 years, nor the restrictive zoning laws everywhere that make it impossible to build affordable homes.
HOAs should be banned from existence for starters.
When home prices go up 3x or more, and all the new buyers are from NY… that’s the reason, not restrictive zoning.
Anonymous wrote:Sure....it's remote work. It couldn't be artificial inflation of property values due to interest rates, low supplies because builders didn't build for 20 years, nor the restrictive zoning laws everywhere that make it impossible to build affordable homes.
HOAs should be banned from existence for starters.
Anonymous wrote:Sure....it's remote work. It couldn't be artificial inflation of property values due to interest rates, low supplies because builders didn't build for 20 years, nor the restrictive zoning laws everywhere that make it impossible to build affordable homes.
HOAs should be banned from existence for starters.
Anonymous wrote:Remote work has destroyed entire towns. This will be a controversial thing to say here, as it probably hasn’t affected anyone in DC, but entire cities that were once affordable to its workforce have become utterly unaffordable to anyone who works there. Case in point: Nashville, Miami, countless beautiful towns in NC, SC, TN, AZ, FL. So where are all these workers supposed to live now that remote workers jacked up prices by 3x?