This may seem off topic but bare with me for a sec. I've been shopping for a house and have started to learn about how real estate transactions work. One of the things I was surprised to discover was the amount of selling costs produced by middlemen (9-12%). Given the pricing of homes, this is far from an insignificant cost. From my calc considering current interest rates, the breakeven time for reselling a home at the price you bought it, is ~ 7 years. Sell before that and you have to jack up the sale price to try not to lose a sizable chunk of change.
As I buyer I'm constantly reminded that they are free to me, but as they say "there's no such thing as a free lunch." These costs are just passed on to the buy via a higher price; hence the [now] fallacious "home prices always rise."
If the cost of housing rises with each transaction, then it seems logical that the economy must grow to support higher wages to support higher costs of living, right? This got me wondering how much of the necessity for growth is a by-product of unnecessary middlemen taking cuts of various commodities?
All the time on everything. That's how a sustaining economy works. Every one gets a piece by inserting themselves in the pie.
But the same time the idea is that everyone in the chain is delivering value or else they wouldn't be there because someone else will provide something better by ruthlessly removing said intermediary out when it is no longer efficient.
If you have a better way of selling houses between people without the need for that 9-12% you would be doing it now or you would have done it by now.
Literally the definition of a founder. You find opportunities to exploit.
From the sellers side, the agent makes sense. Although I would argue a flat or time based fee is more appropriate than a percentage of sale price. The buying agent delivers relatively little value once the purchase agreement has been signed so I would argue they are essentially rent seekers.
I don't believe I'm missing the point you're trying to make; on the contrary, you're missing mine. Selling costs create and artificial floor. It's a pretty simple point that is in no way mutually exclusive to yours.
As I buyer I'm constantly reminded that they are free to me, but as they say "there's no such thing as a free lunch." These costs are just passed on to the buy via a higher price; hence the [now] fallacious "home prices always rise."
If the cost of housing rises with each transaction, then it seems logical that the economy must grow to support higher wages to support higher costs of living, right? This got me wondering how much of the necessity for growth is a by-product of unnecessary middlemen taking cuts of various commodities?