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Backyard Coffee and Jazz in Kyoto

(thedeletedscenes.substack.com)
592 points wyclif | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.203s | source
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mupuff1234 ◴[] No.44356504[source]
It all goes back to zoning laws and regulations.
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Cthulhu_ ◴[] No.44356617[source]
And economic viability; can the owner make a living wage with this setup, or do they have other income sources? What is their total cost of living?
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1776smithadam ◴[] No.44356672[source]
Again, goes back to zoning laws.

Housing is the biggest expenditure for people in America and many parts of the world. Housing is cheap is Japan so people can get by on much less.

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spacemadness ◴[] No.44356964[source]
The one country that seems to do housing right and not consider it an investment vehicle. Unlike our depressing situation that is tearing society apart.
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ajmurmann ◴[] No.44357020[source]
That it's considered an investment vehicle is downstream from the rising markets due to tight regulation which limit supply. In Japan what zones exist is standardized across the country and what zone applies to a given area is defined by the government in Tokyo. This prevents local homeowners to lobby for tighter regulation to strangle supply.
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1. Barrin92 ◴[] No.44357588[source]
>That it's considered an investment vehicle is downstream from the rising markets

That's not what its downstream from, that's restating the same thing in financial terms. What it's actually downstream from is that Japan is a fully urbanized society. The reason why Americans cannot implement this is because houses are their little homesteads and castles, Fukuyama used the term "suburban villager" for this attitude (also prevalent in Greece and Eastern Europe etc.)