Also Housing is not expensive because of a lack of personnel, it's expensive because of zone laws and construction overregulation. Not to mention NIMBY's and the record Urbanization rate.
As I said in the post "Granted, labor may not be the primary bottleneck in the housing shortage, but it is certainly a factor and one that is seemingly being overlooked."
I do not agree, simply cause data showed that AI for now Is displacing mostly high skill jobs. It's very hard to convince a highly skilled and graduated professional to turn down his/her dreams to work in the housing construction market.
This isn't about now, but about what is going to unfold in the next two decades, which is widely expected to impact lower-skilled industries, like driving, retail, warehousing, etc. etc.
Also Housing is not expensive because of a lack of personnel, it's expensive because of zone laws and construction overregulation. Not to mention NIMBY's and the record Urbanization rate.
As I said in the post "Granted, labor may not be the primary bottleneck in the housing shortage, but it is certainly a factor and one that is seemingly being overlooked."
I do not agree, simply cause data showed that AI for now Is displacing mostly high skill jobs. It's very hard to convince a highly skilled and graduated professional to turn down his/her dreams to work in the housing construction market.
This isn't about now, but about what is going to unfold in the next two decades, which is widely expected to impact lower-skilled industries, like driving, retail, warehousing, etc. etc.