Diagnosing Urban Housing Scarcity
A major city is experiencing a severe shortage of affordable housing, leading to rapidly rising rents and displacement of long-term residents. Two economists offer different 'diagnoses' for this problem.
- Economist A's Diagnosis: The core problem is a supply-side failure. Restrictive zoning laws and a lengthy permit process make it difficult and expensive for developers to build new housing units, artificially limiting the housing stock.
- Economist B's Diagnosis: The core problem is a demand-side distortion. The rise of short-term rental platforms and speculative investment in real estate has removed a significant number of units from the long-term rental market and driven up prices beyond what local wage-earners can afford.
Analyze how each of these distinct diagnoses would lead to different policy 'treatments.' Conclude by evaluating which diagnosis you believe offers a more comprehensive understanding of the problem, or if both are necessary for a complete picture, and justify your reasoning.
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Diagnosing Urban Housing Scarcity