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it doesn't matter if prices are falling or rising, it only matters how the ROI of building compares to other investment opportunities

we can also make it cheaper to build. easing taxes on imported materials, bringing in more skilled labor, expediting permits, and even direct subsidies like tax breaks

> it doesn't matter if prices are falling or rising, it only matters how the ROI of building compares to other investment opportunities

Correct, which it basically doesn't in Austin, which is why construction is decelerating.

> we can also make it cheaper to build

Yep, this is the only structural solution. The "just add supply" runs into the problem of price equilibriums. The reality is the input costs of building housing basically guarantees that housing is hard-to-attain for any local market. We need to address the cost of inputs. Temporary reductions in price are temporary and the market will self-correct back to restrict supply (as we're seeing in Austin) until prices go back up to being hard-to-attain.

The problem is it can't drive prices below what the free market would dictate?

Talk about praising with faint damns.

No, the problem is that the free market in advanced economies appears to dictate a price point for housing that is unattainable for broad swaths of society.

Classic case of Baumol's disease, which is not solved by "well duh we just gotta build more." People will not "just build" enough to solve the problem because they won't "just build" beyond equilibrium (for long).