Here, yes.
Ah, but here's the subtle thing: if your firm already has a bias towards Bay Area availability, you get 2 sorts: those who will put their families in a shoebox (or do without families), or the existing set. Prices for both are lower than Pareto-optimality under solidarity.
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And in an area and discipline that can't talk frankly about inequality, the patina of meritocracy and rational choice creates structurally bad outcomes for all.
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The whole weirdness of the non-company town is an assumption that if only the company would get out of the way, the municipality would come together to do things fairly. What *actually* happens is the existing homeowners conspire against the future ones.
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