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andrewlainton.wordpress.com
| | jamesjgleeson.wordpress.com
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| | Jonathan Ely of the FT tweeted today: Me on UK housing for @ft 1) there is no shortage of homes 2) high prices caused by credit explosion and feudal land system 3) successive govts too gutless to reformhttps://t.co/Mbznycz70p - Jonathan Eley (@JonathanEley) November 20, 2017 Reading the article, "there is no shortage of homes" is...
| | blog.shelter.org.uk
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| | This is my last ever blog for Shelter, so I hope I can be forgiven for indulging in a bit of arguing-with-men-on-the-internet. Challenging the consensus There is no denying that there is now a well-established consensus that England has not been building enough homes for many years, so it was probably inevitable that it would ...
| | www.jacobinmag.com
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| | YIMBYs look to the free market to solve the housing crisis. But the profit motive is what caused the affordability crunch in the first place.
| | www.frbsf.org
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| As U.S. economic growth slows this year, a key question is whether job openings can fall from historical highs without a substantial rise in unemployment. Analyzing the current Beveridge curve relationship between unemployment and job openings presents a meaningful possibility that labor market pressures can ease and achieve a "soft landing" with only a limited increase in unemployment. This view is supported by high rates of job matching in the U.S. labor market in 2022, despite ongoing employment reallocation across industries.