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Apartment Glut Expands - WSJ.com
With foreclosures and home vacancies also high, it is pretty clear that more people are sharing living accommodations now (e.g. with friends, family). That's probably actually a good trend - in the aggregate, unnecessary more-individualistic living accommodations are among the biggest wastes of societal productivity. Of course, on an individual level, it is a lifestyle choice and I completely understand why most people feel it is worth the cost if they can afford it (I certainly have no room to be critical of that choice). Unfortunately, a lot of people that really couldn't afford it, or could only 'afford' it in the strictest sense, have made that choice.
Here's a hint to builders - stop building for a while - we have an excess of living accommodations.
Apartment vacancies hit their highest point since 1986, surging in cities from Raleigh, N.C., to Tacoma, Wash., as rising unemployment continued to chip away at demand during the traditionally strong summer rental months.
The U.S. vacancy rate reached 7.8%, a 23-year high, according to Reis Inc., a New York real-estate research firm that tracks vacancies and rents in the top 79 U.S. markets. The rate is expected to climb further in the fall and winter, when rental demand is weaker, pushing vacancies to the highest levels since Reis began its count in 1980.
With foreclosures and home vacancies also high, it is pretty clear that more people are sharing living accommodations now (e.g. with friends, family). That's probably actually a good trend - in the aggregate, unnecessary more-individualistic living accommodations are among the biggest wastes of societal productivity. Of course, on an individual level, it is a lifestyle choice and I completely understand why most people feel it is worth the cost if they can afford it (I certainly have no room to be critical of that choice). Unfortunately, a lot of people that really couldn't afford it, or could only 'afford' it in the strictest sense, have made that choice.
Here's a hint to builders - stop building for a while - we have an excess of living accommodations.