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If anything, it makes me want to make sure that when the bust comes we keep these jerks pent up and responsible for their reckless actions, no mercy.
I couldn't agree more. There should be no free ride for irresponsible spending. I'm hoping the new bankruptcy laws keep more people accountable for their stupidity.
Thanks, Sacto! There's is quite possibly nothing we haven't discussed yet, but still. :-P Here are some thoughts on negatives, plus a few positives:
Negatives I've observed:
1. the more people have, the more they want.
2. Marriages strained due to long work hours and struggles to afford BA cost of living
3. kids who have very little time with their parents
4. people with more of a grasping, greedy mentality than I've ever seen before
5. Extended families being more spread apart because of inability to afford living in the same places...so, kids growing up with no grandparents around
6. Older people trapped in houses bigger than they need, or in declining neighborhoods, because they can't afford to move with current prices and the tax situation
Positives:
1. more immigrants spreading out to affordable middle America, creating more diversity there and giving them a better chance to realize the American dream (I hope)
I'm trying to think of some other positives (and negatives), but I've gotta go for now. Later.
There have been plenty of social effects attributable to the RE bubble in the BA and other bubble-markets. I assert that these effects range from terrible, socially disruptive to benign to positive. As with most economic forces, there are winners, losers, and structural change.
For me, the worst losers in the BA have been those caught in the increasingly fragmented sections of the socio-economic strata. Put simply, as nominal prices have increased rapidly in low-wealth areas (price increases as a percentage risen fastest in poorer communities), people with the least means have been permantly cut off from an important source of personal wealth generation within the US economy. Although we tend to focus on the educated class (formerly known as the middle class) and their problems buying into RE, most in this strata will nonetheless be successful in generating personal/family wealth over their lifetimes. It is the working class that are now all but completely cut off from any hope of generating wealth in excess of income.
And I don't think a correction will help. Unfortantely, it will be the poor who take the brunt of the restructuring that will occur post bubble, as many of the higher paying jobs available to them evaporate. They simply won't be in any position to exploit lower RE prices given lower expected incomes and higher cost of debt.
The biggest positive effect of the RE bubble has been the degree to which real wealth has been created. A significant portion of GDP growth post 2000 has been derived from US consumer spending and RE growth. Although RE deflation will halt this, and asset values will decrease, it won't erase the real gains in capital stock that have accumulated within the economy. So long as we don't enter a period of prolonged recession, stagflation, or worse, then this will turn out to have been a lasting positive effect of the rapid RE appreciation.
But, back to my main worry. I really fear that major political, legal, economic restructuring will be necessary within the next couple decades to deal with the growing population segment that will in effect become permanent rentors. We will likely see many areas push through more forms of rent control, rentor protections, etc.--perhaps more akin to mainland Europe. I won't argue the merits of that system, but it will be a major cultural and structural shift for the US system of "perceived social mobility".
(just my opinion, it's worth what you paid)
Well, this one, from my extreme perspective, is too easy.
It's not really the housing bubble.
It's America. It's diseased, and it has been for a long time.
The housing bubble is merely a bed sore on America's rotting ass.
The "social" affect will be simple. Write this down moderates, so you'll remember me later . . .
This country is going to collapse. Not recede. Not recess. Collapse. That we create a void. What will fill the void is the only question.
Among the obvious options . . . Hillary and her communist friends. Very conservative religious folk.
And let me throw this out there to Jamie . . .
as for "diversity spreading to middle America", what do you mean by "diversity"?
Diversity of skin color?
Diversity of culture?
Because I gotta point out, the first is silly, and the second is probably unwanted if that culutre resembles the immigrant culutre in Cali, which is significantly mexican.
Diversity for the sake of diversity is one of the great leftist con jobs of the last 30 years.
MIT, for example, has 20% "underrepresented" minorities. Boy, if it wasn't for them damn asians, they wouldn't be obliged to use the word "underrepreseted". In any case, this diversity for diversity's sake is destructive.
In the ideal society, there would be no diversity; everybody would be a good person looking to care for ems neighbor.
And I don’t think a correction will help. Unfortantely, it will be the poor who take the brunt of the restructuring that will occur post bubble, as many of the higher paying jobs available to them evaporate. They simply won’t be in any position to exploit lower RE prices given lower expected incomes and higher cost of debt.
I agree.
Furthermore, this zero-sum game (sorry) is about taking from the poor and giving to the rich. No evil force at work here. Just a natural tendency. There is nothing particularly wrong about it. Just make sure we position ourselves and play accordingly.
"There is nothing particularly wrong about it"
I can't agree. When they're, in the aggregate, less intelligent, less educated, and biologically less able to compete with you and me, is it, in the end, ok to take their money?
Diversity for the sake of diversity is one of the great leftist con jobs of the last 30 years.
Well said. True diveristy comes naturally. Diversity for the sake of diversity is just a trick to get votes.
The “social†affect will be simple. Write this down moderates, so you’ll remember me later . . .
This country is going to collapse. Not recede. Not recess. Collapse. That we create a void. What will fill the void is the only question.
I'm sorry, I'm driven by logical arguments, data, and facts. If you assert that the country will collapse then state your hypothesis so we can test it. Otherwise, it's so much hot air.
As to diversity: the perception of social mobility has been a driving economic force in this country since the early Industrial Revolution (ala Horatio Alger). This implied diversity because the new stock of workers were immigrants, first form Europe, later from Asia and the Americas. Although I'll agree that social-engineering of diversity doesn't work, the claim made here was that economically-driven diversity is a good thing. I challenge you to logically deny this fact...and if you can, go submit yourself for a Nobel prize in Economics. "Leftist con jobs" lol. The industrialist Oligarchs who imported millions of workers from Asia were leftists as much as I'm short-winded.
I can’t agree. When they’re, in the aggregate, less intelligent, less educated, and biologically less able to compete with you and me, is it, in the end, ok to take their money?
It is an amoral act. Hey, I thought you are a libertarian. ;)
I do not agree that poor people are necessarily less intelligent as a group. However, they are not well aligned with the game. It is not really their fault. They just have a different philosophy about life that may turn out to be ... right.
Remember Condoflip.com (and all those RE get-rich-quick seminars that have sprouted like fungus everywhere)? Now meet "GotExit?": www.gotexit.net
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Our presenters and affiliates are all experts in their fields and include: attorneys, CPAs, financial planners, realtors, 1031 accommodators, and other industry professionals.
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Per Jamie's request
What kind of social impact do you think there has been by the bubble? Are people any different because of the wealth effect? What about the social impact on people who have not bought into the RE market? Do you think what we are seeing is predictable human behavior that will occur again in the next bubble?
Is there a social impact we haven't discussed yet?
#bubbles