When St. Paul put rent controls in place, housing construction dropped off sharply. Meanwhile, right across the border, Minneapolis took a different approach—zero rent regulation—and watched its downtown explode with development. Two neighboring cities, two completely different outcomes. It's a textbook case of how policy shapes market behavior. One restricts supply, the other lets builders respond to demand. The numbers tell the story.

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fork_in_the_roadvip
· 13h ago
Once regulation is implemented, the houses are gone. This logic is brilliant.
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SellTheBouncevip
· 13h ago
Once regulation is introduced, builders will run away... I've seen this trick before. Human nature is like this—wherever there is freedom, there is profit to be made. Minneapolis will eventually be eroded as well. When there's a rebound, it's time to liquidate.
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CryptoPunstervip
· 13h ago
Haha, once regulation is enforced, the building is gone. Isn't that what they say— the more you try to protect the retail investors, the faster they get wiped out.
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TokenAlchemistvip
· 13h ago
classic case of supply-side inefficiency vectors collapsing under regulatory friction tbh. st. paul basically created artificial scarcity while minneapolis just... let the market decode itself. the arbitrage surface between those two cities is actually insane if you think about it from a real estate yield optimization angle
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ContractHuntervip
· 13h ago
Once regulation comes, it's the end. Free markets are the true way to go.
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