the housing crisis has been created by banking practices that have directed excessive amounts of credit into the property market, and especially residential mortgages. As a result, buyers can bid prices up to ever-higher levels, resulting in a market where people must pay more for the same type of housing. Hence financialization can be defined as an inflationary tendency in the housing market that is induced jointly by banks’ desire to expand mortgage lending and buyers’ confidence that the value of their properties will rise.

However, the image of a bubble bursting and prices returning to a more rational “equilibrium” level does not seem to apply to the housing market. Because housing is a necessity, people are willing to pay high prices for it. Bidding wars can therefore persist even when relative supply grows, so long as credit markets enable them.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3 hours ago

    If you have a minor in economics, you know about frictional misallocation. It addresses nothing.

    Maybe I’d attach some kind of significance to the slight fluctuation they mentioned, if the “trends” they identified from the statistics they actually showed us weren’t lying with statistics. As it is, I’ll put that in the innuendo category.