[deleted] t1_j4r47o0 wrote
Reply to comment by jeffwulf in New apartment buildings in low-income areas lead to lower rents in nearby housing units. This runs contrary to popular claims that new market-rate housing causes an uptick in rents and leads to the displacement of low-income people. by smurfyjenkins
the idea of entire areas owned 90% by 1 company doesn't set off any alarms for you?
when highrise apartment buildings are built it's not like there's that many millionaires to choose from who could possibly afford to build & own it.
jeffwulf t1_j4r7jhh wrote
Depends on how big an entire area is. It would have to be pretty sizable before it's meaningful.
There's like 30,000,000 millionaires in the US alone.
[deleted] t1_j4r8xv3 wrote
psh regular retirees are millionaires, that means nothing. especially if you'd have to liquidate every investment & property to get that $1mil.
an average, basic 100 unit apartment building would cost $37+ million to build. so an individual building an apartment building would probably have $100+ million net worth. high end apartments could cost $100 million to build & require someone with $250million.
and then they need to charge like it cost $370 million or they'll never make their money back
but in reality, that's rare, a billion dollar corporation is going to be the one building these apartments. similarly, if youve ever seen a new neighborhood built, every house is built by 1 company. the difference is that the houses are sold to individuals, creating diverse suppliers. where the apartments/rentals continue to be owned by the rich & who then have the opportunity to control the market since not many people can afford to compete with billionaires
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