Gas Stove Pollution Harms Poor and Minority Americans Most, Study Finds
Households making under $10,000 per year experience double the exposure to pollution compared to households making more than $150,000.
Latest Videos
The information you requested is not available at this time, please check back again soon.
Households making under $10,000 per year experience double the exposure to pollution compared to households making more than $150,000.
Berlin-based condom producer Einhorn has promoted its mission to protect the environment with products like its vegan, fair-trade rubbers. Now, it’s taking that ambition out of the bedroom and onto the balcony.
Wall Street analysts see a double-digit upside potential for the S&P 500’s biggest losers this year: real estate stocks.
US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said she still sees underlying price pressures receding even as a tight housing supply has helped stall the downward path of inflation.
About $52 billion, or 31%, of all office loans in commercial mortgage bonds were in trouble in March, according to KBRA Analytics.
Apr 3, 2024
Bloomberg News
,Canada doesn’t have enough skilled tradespeople to build its way out of its current housing shortage, threatening long-term damage to the country’s social fabric, according to a top executive at one of the world’s biggest real estate firms.
Housing is becoming the central issue ahead of Canada’s next general election, currently expected in 2025, with a lack of dwellings and rapid population growth driving up prices. The country needs an additional 3.5 million homes, which would involve more than doubling its pace of construction, according to a 2022 study from Canada’s national housing agency.
“The inconvenient truth is that we are not going to hit those targets — we will likely not get anywhere close to those targets,” Paul Morassutti, CBRE Group Inc.’s chairman in Canada, said at the Vancouver Real Estate Forum on Wednesday. “Even if we had approvals across the country to build thousands of units, we cannot physically build them, because we don’t have enough trades.”
Policymakers must “get something done, because this is definitely a crisis,” he said. There’s little sign that home prices will fall as supply-demand imbalances have only gotten worse, and they may even rise once buyers return to the market, Morassutti said.
“The scale of the problem, which has been many years in the making, is massive,” he said. “Income inequality and housing affordability are very pernicious issues. Left unaddressed, the damage to our social and economic fabric will only worsen.”