
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Historically, one major reason has consistently been cited for the growth in housing costs in this country: the rising cost of building homes. But that relationship is changing. In this episode, University of Chicago economist Chad Syverson breaks down 75 years of data to reveal a surprising truth—construction costs and housing prices have become "completely decoupled." From the post-WWII boom to today's record-breaking market, Syverson explains why building materials and labor costs can no longer explain skyrocketing home prices, and what factors are really driving the housing affordability crisis.
4.1
171171 ratings
Historically, one major reason has consistently been cited for the growth in housing costs in this country: the rising cost of building homes. But that relationship is changing. In this episode, University of Chicago economist Chad Syverson breaks down 75 years of data to reveal a surprising truth—construction costs and housing prices have become "completely decoupled." From the post-WWII boom to today's record-breaking market, Syverson explains why building materials and labor costs can no longer explain skyrocketing home prices, and what factors are really driving the housing affordability crisis.
1,966 Listeners
4,258 Listeners
91,149 Listeners
30,717 Listeners
32,140 Listeners
652 Listeners
1,398 Listeners
75,042 Listeners
2,430 Listeners
1,857 Listeners
10,727 Listeners
379 Listeners
307 Listeners
3,547 Listeners
45,895 Listeners
9,537 Listeners
541 Listeners
471 Listeners
7,077 Listeners
2,212 Listeners
2,100 Listeners
5,497 Listeners
16,210 Listeners
297 Listeners