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From October 2013



I did a quick check (https://www.zoopla.co.uk/to-rent/property/west-hampstead/) and contrary to what I thought, a 1 bedroom apartment over there is still in the same range as 2013; I was sure it would've been double by now.


While in Barcelona rents have been skyrocketing, largely due to British and other "expats" moving in:

https://www.ft.com/content/d82f2c93-ab1b-46c7-b25f-ba768b813...


Why would you expect it doubled?

Population has not doubled, wages have not doubled, remote working became common after 2020 covid.


(not the person you're responding to, and I wouldn't have expected it to double, but definitely increase with double digits %)

Yes, but it's well known that in most of the developed world housing is becoming more expensive and housing costs are outpacing wages, for a variety of reasons.

Here's an infographic about the EU, based on Eurostat: https://www.reddit.com/r/europe/s/ZAsqzx4tRo


Mostly it's a function of interest rates, the boom in prices happened after interest rates dropped close to zero (after the financial crisis).

Unfortunately house prices tend to be sticky so they won't decline so quickly when interest rates rise but they certainly haven't been keeping pace with inflation nor wages over the last few years (in the UK).


> Mostly it's a function of interest rates, the boom in prices happened after interest rates dropped close to zero (after the financial crisis).

Same as inflation, it's a complex multidimensional issue, anyone trying to reduce it to one single thing is missing at best half the picture.

Very strict zoning (most heavily impacting anglophone North America), which caps potential supply + property as an investment boom which increases investment in and financial incentives out of, and thus prices + Airbnb and similar reducing supply + increased building standards + vested interests (for lots of people them owning their home is a significant portion of their portfolio, so they don't want to see it's value decrease) resulting in NIMBYism reducing or slowing down construction + increased concentration in prospering cities and further inflating prices there, low interest rates enabling cheaper investments from people or corporations, etc etc etc.




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