Has any country actually solved the housing crisis?
So there's a ton of countries that I've heard have had truly unaffordable housing for decades, like:
The UK
Ireland
The Netherlands
And I've heard of a ton of countries where the cost of houses was until recently quite affordable where it's also started getting worse:
Germany
Poland
Czechia
Hungary
The US
Australia
Canada
And I'm sure plenty others
It seems to be a pan-Western bloc thing. Is the cause in all these countries the same?
We've heard of success stories in cities like Vienna where much of the housing stock is municipally owned – but those cities have had it that way for decades. Would their system alleviate the current crisis if established in the aforementioned countries?
What specific policies should I be demanding of our politicians to make housing affordable again? Is there any silver bullet? Has any country demonstrably managed to reverse this crisis yet?
As a Finn, please stop talking about us as some kind of utopia. We haven't solved shit and our government is infested with fascists. I'm preeetty sure there are a lot more than that out there, unless a quarter of those 1000 happen to be around my morning commute.
That's good to hear, although it's kinda beyond the scope of my question. I'm asking more about how to stop prices rising when they've suddenly started quickly rising and people don't know why.
It doesn't, that's just a bullshit, half baked "argument" people like to use when someone points out to them that Scandinavian nations have figured most of this shit out already.