Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Charles Marohn's avatar

I want to clarify one thing, because it seems to keep getting reframed.

My argument is not that supply doesn’t matter. It’s not that state reform is illegitimate. It’s not that local institutions are perfect.

The question I’m raising is structural.

Even if we successfully reform zoning everywhere.

Even if we build at historically unprecedented rates.

What happens when prices start to fall in a system built on price appreciation?

Housing is not just shelter. It is collateral. It underwrites pensions, banks, municipal finance, and household balance sheets. When prices flatten, capital pulls back. When prices decline meaningfully, political and financial pressure mounts to stabilize them.

If the system intervenes to prevent sustained price correction — as it repeatedly has — then supply alone cannot deliver durable affordability at scale.

That’s the tension.

If we want to make housing broadly affordable, we have to grapple with that political economy, not just the regulatory layer.

No posts

Ready for more?