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...Entrando más en detalle, diría que al haber menos gente para los mismos recursos (porque gracias a la tecnología podemos producir prácticamente lo mismo con la mitad de mano de obra que a principios de siglo), la abundancia empuja a la deflación.Por donde no paso es por "al haber menos demografía, los hogares invertirán más en vivienda". ¿De qué chistera se sacan ese razonamiento? Si hay menos gente, ¿para qué carajo se iba a invertir más en vivienda?
[La mancha de aceite se expande.https://www.corelogic.com/intelligence/homeowner-equity-insights-q1-2023/ «Algo huele a podrido en Dinamarca».]
Toward 1300, however, the brilliance of the French kingdom began to tarnish. The golden age turned into a gilded age. While elite opulence continued unabated, the living conditions of common people deteriorated. The root cause of popular immiseration was the massive population boom in Western Europe in the two centuries before 1300. If in 1100 there were around six million people inhabiting the territory within the modern borders of France, two centuries later the population more than tripled, exceeding twenty million. Population explosion overwhelmed the capacity of the medieval economy to provide land for peasants, jobs for workers, and food for all. The majority of the population lived on the edge of starvation, and a series of crop failures and livestock epidemics between 1315 and 1322 tipped the system over the edge. By 1325, the population of France was 10–15 percent below the peak it reached in 1300. Then came the Black Death, killing between one-quarter and one-half of the population. By the end of the fourteenth century, the population of France collapsed to ten million—half of what it was in 1300. As though millions of deaths were not enough, the demographic catastrophe had another, more subtle but nevertheless devastating effect on social stability by making the social pyramid unsustainably top-heavy. After 1250, the number of nobles increased even faster than that of the general population, because their economic position was better than that of the commoners. In fact, popular immiseration benefited the elites, who profited from high land rents, low wages, and high food prices. In other words, massive overpopulation during the thirteenth century created a wealth pump that enriched landowners at the expense of peasants.Turchin, Peter . End Times . Penguin Books Ltd. Edición de Kindle.
https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/sweden-braces-fallout-property-slump-2023-06-16/CitarSweden braces for fallout from property slump
Sweden braces for fallout from property slump
Las pierde Barcelona y Bilbao ... claro .. luego miras los números y no. El relato , ay! El relato.