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posted by martyb on Friday March 09 2018, @07:09PM   Printer-friendly
from the roomers-rumors? dept.

There are two kinds of horror stories about Airbnb. When the home-sharing platform first appeared, the initial cautionary tales tended to emphasize extreme guest (and occasionally host) misbehavior. But as the now decade-old service matured and the number of rental properties proliferated dramatically, a second genre emerged, one that focused on what the service was doing to the larger community: Airbnb was raising rents and taking housing off the rental market. It was supercharging gentrification while discriminating against guests and hosts of color. And as commercial operators took over, it was transforming from a way to help homeowners occasionally rent out an extra room into a purveyor of creepy, makeshift hotels.

Several studies have looked into these claims; some focused on just one issue at a time, or measured Airbnb-linked trends across wide swaths of the country. But a recent report by David Wachsmuth, a professor of Urban Planning at McGill University, zeroes in on New York City in an effort to answer the question of exactly what home sharing is doing to the city.

Source: https://www.citylab.com/equity/2018/03/what-airbnb-did-to-new-york-city/552749/


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 10 2018, @05:22AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 10 2018, @05:22AM (#650403)

    I hear this argument a lot - poor people are having a lot of kids - but it is so completely false. Birth-rate alone hardly has any effect on population, it is the difference between birth rate and death rate which affects population. Historically, both have followed each other closely. Population increase in last century is a direct consequence of detaching death rate from the equation due to better medical facilities, mostly the invention of anti-biotics, and the ability of poor people to avail these inventions. I suppose that is why so many people are against universal health-care, they really want the poor people to die.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 10 2018, @03:32PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 10 2018, @03:32PM (#650529)

    Of course, that doesn't imply that they should die; it just implies they shouldn't be created.