House prices in the rich world are booming
Unusually, suburbs not cities are feeling the heat
ON A SUNNY afternoon in Kingsmere, a new suburb of Bicester, a town 50 miles (80km) north-west of London, the streets are abuzz with people strolling and children playing. In ten years 1,600 homes have been built on the site, and another 900 are soon to follow. In the sales office for Bovis Homes, Flip Baglee says she has “never known it to be so busy”. Sentiment in Rhinebeck, a village 80 miles north of New York City, is similarly buoyant. Many of the properties advertised in the window of Gary DiMauro Real Estate—from mansions to cottages—are already taken.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “The race for space”
Finance & economics April 10th 2021
- House prices in the rich world are booming
- The IMF marks up the global recovery
- Janet Yellen calls for a global minimum tax on companies. Could it happen?
- Coinbase goes public with a pop
- Totting up bitcoin’s environmental costs
- As China’s stockmarket corrects, regulators try doing less
- Robert Mundell, an influential international economist, has died
- In poor countries, statistics are both undersupplied and underused
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