| ▲ | kristopolous 5 hours ago | |||||||
No it's not. It's 2 cherry picked data points with a sample size of 1 of a complex system with multiple confounding factors such as a pandemic You can look at other neighborhoods such as palms in Los Angeles, which has the most aggressive housing build out in all of California. Median rent has increased - sometimes more housing can create more demand | ||||||||
| ▲ | mactrey 5 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Did rents in Palms go up because they built housing or because it's a great location in a city with increasing rent almost everywhere? Or in other words, is there any econometric evidence that building housing increased rents in Palms, or could we be confusing correlation with causation? | ||||||||
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