It’s Summer Fundraising Time!

Thank you to all our generous donors who have already contributed to our cause; your support makes a tremendous impact. If you haven’t yet, please consider making a donation today to help us continue our vital work.

$3,320 of $60,000 raised

CNN Blames San Francisco’s Booming Tech Sector for a Government-Created Housing Shortage

by | Oct 20, 2018

CNN Blames San Francisco’s Booming Tech Sector for a Government-Created Housing Shortage

by | Oct 20, 2018

https://pixabay.com/en/cityscape-city-town-row-houses-2747226/

San Francisco is one of the most expensive places to live and work in the United States, with average monthly rent for a one-bedroom apartment approaching $2,500. This is largely the result of the Bay Area adding a tremendous amount of jobs and people over the past decade, but failing to build housing for these new residents.

From January 2010 to January 2018, the city added 100,000 jobs, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, with many of those in San Francisco’s booming tech sector. In that same time period, the city has added a little over 20,000 housing units. The predictable result of quickly rising demand and slowly growing supply has been a massive spike in rents, pricing some residents out of the city, and others on to the streets.

The increasingly widespread conclusion is that this failure to build housing is a policy failure, born from highly restrictive land use regulations that’ve prevented the construction of new units. It’s a story that everyone can agree on, from the Cato Institute to some of the city’s progressive politicians.

“When it comes to housing, yes, supply and demand is a real thing,” said San Francisco Mayor London Breed during her inaugural address. “We often ask ‘should we build more housing for teachers, nonprofit workers, or the homeless?’ Then we answer with an unending system of laws and procedures that seem designed to say no.”

Read the rest at reason.com.

Christian Britschgi

Christian Britschgi

View all posts

Our Books

libertarian inst books

Related Articles

Related

TGIF: Culture without Romance

TGIF: Culture without Romance

"The entire history of the human race, the rise of man from the caves, has been marked by transfers of cultural advances from one group to another and from one civilization to another." So said economist, social philosopher, and historian Thomas Sowell in a 1990...

read more
The Means of Our Future Horror

The Means of Our Future Horror

Presidential campaign season is in full heat. Given the vast power of the state, the warring identity lines within our society, and the people’s susceptibility to all manner of propagandistic discourse, it’s looking a lot like midnight in America. Americans consume...

read more

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This