Will America’s housing boom lead to another financial crisis?
It is hard not to feel uneasy, but lending standards are much higher
A FAVOURED PASTIME for city dwellers on holiday to quainter towns and villages is to peruse the windows of local property firms and dream of swapping their cramped two-bedroom flat for an entire house and garden. Your correspondent is not immune to the appeal: she gazed wistfully at a pretty house near the Deschutes river in Bend, Oregon, situated among the lakes and peaks of the Cascade mountains (pictured). She dutifully checked the listing price on Zillow, a real-estate platform, only to face grim reality: the three-bedroom house was worth $1.25m, a 44% increase from a year earlier, yielding a price per square foot higher than Queens and most of Washington, DC.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “A prettier picture”
Finance & economics June 19th 2021
- Uneven vaccination rates are creating a new economic divide
- Will America’s housing boom lead to another financial crisis?
- Why China has learned to relax about its currency
- America’s high-yield debt is on ever-shakier foundations
- The methods and menace of the new bank robbers
- Is the pandemic accelerating automation? Don’t be so sure
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