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Airbnb, The Renting Economy And The Fall Of The Housing Market


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Median US income: $68,000.

Median home price: $440,000.

The math doesn't work.


Only 13% of Americans earn a salary. Everyone else gets paid hourly or hustles in the gig economy. Yet housing policy assumes stable W-2 income, 20% down payments, and 30-year mortgages.


The system is built to extract value, not create stability.


Chris Moeller joins Mark and Jeremy to talk about an alternative: stable living.


Here's what's broken:


"Affordable housing" sounds nice. But it runs on outdated subsidies, wage assumptions from the 1970s, and ownership models designed to extract profit. Developers flip. Investors extract. Renters get priced out. First-time buyers can't enter.


Nobody wins except capital.


Stable living flips the model:

- Separate land from structures (land trusts own the land, residents own the building)

- Long-term security instead of short-term yield (no flipping, no speculation)

- Impact capital instead of extractive finance (returns that don't require displacement)

- Industrialized construction (modular, faster, cheaper)

- Better coordination technology (reduce waste, speed up builds)


The goal isn't homeownership. It's housing security.


Right now, housing is treated as an investment vehicle. Your home appreciates, you build wealth. Great—if you already own. Catastrophic if you're trying to enter the market.


We talk about:

- Why "affordable housing" programs fail (wage assumptions, subsidy gaps, developer incentives)

- How land trusts work (Vienna's model, community ownership)

- What impact capital means (patient investors, social returns)

- Why modular construction isn't "cheap"—it's efficient

- Whether stable living can scale (or if it's just theory)


Chris's point: Housing became financialized. We turned shelter—a basic human need—into an asset class. Private equity owns 800,000 single-family homes. Airbnb removed 300,000 units from rental markets. Zoning prevents new supply.


The result: You can't afford to live where you work.


Stable living isn't utopian. It's pragmatic. Separate speculation from shelter. Build for people who live there, not investors who don't.


If you're priced out, paying half your income in rent, or wondering why starter homes disappeared, this episode explains the system—and the alternative.


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Guest: Chris Moeller

Topics: Housing crisis, affordable housing, stable living, land trusts, impact capital, modular construction, real estate, financialization

Models discussed: Vienna housing, community land trusts, resident ownership

Stats: Median income $68K, median home price $440K, 13% salary workers


Please enjoy the show.

And remember: Stay curious. Be disruptive. Keep Thinking on Paper.


Cheers, Mark & Jeremy


PS: Please subscribe. It’s the best way you can help other curious minds find our channel.


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Timestamps

(00:00) Trailer

(03:19) Challenges of Homeownership

(05:46) The Housing Market Dynamics

(08:29) Technology's Role in Housing Solutions

(10:41) Innovations in Construction

(12:29) Financing Housing for All

(15:06) Reimagining Ownership Models

(16:30) Technology's Role in Food Access and Coordination

(18:43) Adaptive Reuse in Real Estate and Community Development

(19:58) Commercial Real Estate Challenges Post-COVID

(23:15) Infrastructure Needs for Sustainable Living

(25:31) Global Community and Local Solutions

(26:45) Stable Living for Civil Servants and Community Heroes

(28:20) Creating Stability and Long-Term Impact


...more
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