by MrBill » Fri 09 Nov 2007, 10:42:49
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'M')ost people in the US don't live anywhere near any public transportation, so unless they sell their houses they are stuck with their cars as transportation. There is no alternative to driving around. They will have to switch to a more efficient car, but they won't move towards a place that makes sense for a while. The real estate market is tanking, so they couldn't sell their houses for a good price anyway. I don't know if that makes gasoline a giffen good, but they are stuck with buying it for quite a while.
Revi, this is a change in culture that can only be imposed by economic hardship, external events and by necessity.
But looking at History I would suggest that large homes will be split into multi-family units. Much like Britain's Victorian homes have been subdivided into apartments. This is a natural transition as the cost of space becomes too expensive and either multi-generations share the same home or it is divided into multi-family units.
As the population of the USA is expected to rise from 300 million to 500 million, and an exodus from Mexico once their own oil production collapses is not out of the question, this might not lead to a complete collapse in what is now Suburbia.
These areas will be serviced by mini-buses much like in much of the developing world. Where train service is simply unavailable, but where people still need to commute to whatever jobs are available, it makes sense to run mini-buses or other quasi-semi-public/semi-private transport.
Am I on drugs or something? I do not think so. First of all, even well-heeled investment bankers in The City of London take coaches, or what you would call large buses, to points outside The City such as South End on the Sea and other communities outside of London. A journey of no less than 1-2 hours on a daily basis.
And secondly, even my colleagues here in Cyprus that live in Larnaca, but work in Limassol, take an organized shuttle versus trying to drive on their own or carpool.
In short, what may be personally unpalatable today, or politically unacceptable in the near future, may become widely embraced when necessity dictates it.
And I suppose thirdly, buildings and materials are recyclable. My first jobs starting when I was only 6-years old or so was in fact cleaning bricks for re-sale by chipping the mortar off them; salvaging used lumber from grain elevators; pulling nails out of boards; and helping to renovate houses for conversion from single family homes to duplexes and four-plexes. My father was a big believer in Sweat Equity, which roughly means More Time Than Money! But for me meant, No Free Weekends! ; - )
So malls for cow barns? Double glazed windows for hot houses? Recycled motorhomes in pole sheds lined with straw bails and wood stoves for heat in winter? It may be a Hill Billy future? But some of us have already been there and got the wood stove and distillery out back to prove it! ; - )
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.