Obviously we're getting off-topic (and I'm sure this will be moved), but does the concept of induced demand apply to housing at all? Especially in a major market like Boston?
The simple supply/demand concept with housing seems to be "Build more and housing will cost less!" I'm inclined to lean towards that not necessarily being the case if we build new units at anything less than unprecedented "boom" levels. I imagine it would work similar to induced demand with highways. Even if you add a few thousand units per year, they'll be filled so quickly, you'll see little improvement in terms of both price and availability. You'll reach capacity again quickly and will be back in the same spot you were in before the few thousand units were built.
In order to actually see an impact on both availability and price, you'd have to add new units at a staggering rate (tens of thousands per year). Thankfully, unlike trying to add 15 lanes to I-93, there's room for that in the city. Unfortunately, I don't think developers will be willing to flood the market with tens of thousands of new housing units. It's not a good strategy from an economic standpoint. Real estate prices demand a certain return on development and flooding the market jeopardizes the chances for a positive ROI.
As you can tell I know nothing about real estate and very little about economics, but I have a hard time seeing the "solution" to the housing crunch being as simple as just adding a ton of units.
The simple supply/demand concept with housing seems to be "Build more and housing will cost less!" I'm inclined to lean towards that not necessarily being the case if we build new units at anything less than unprecedented "boom" levels. I imagine it would work similar to induced demand with highways. Even if you add a few thousand units per year, they'll be filled so quickly, you'll see little improvement in terms of both price and availability. You'll reach capacity again quickly and will be back in the same spot you were in before the few thousand units were built.
In order to actually see an impact on both availability and price, you'd have to add new units at a staggering rate (tens of thousands per year). Thankfully, unlike trying to add 15 lanes to I-93, there's room for that in the city. Unfortunately, I don't think developers will be willing to flood the market with tens of thousands of new housing units. It's not a good strategy from an economic standpoint. Real estate prices demand a certain return on development and flooding the market jeopardizes the chances for a positive ROI.
As you can tell I know nothing about real estate and very little about economics, but I have a hard time seeing the "solution" to the housing crunch being as simple as just adding a ton of units.