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Cheap City

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Published : June 10th, 2020
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Category : Editorials

Tokyo is one of the most expensive cities on earth; and also, a place where one can live cheaply, and well. Here’s why:

Abundant low-cost market-rate housing. Tokyo just keeps building, mostly replacing dingy old buildings with nicer, larger new buildings. The result is that there is more and more housing that is close to transit and the city center, even though Japan’s overall population is shrinking. You can spend as much on an apartment as you want, but you can also spend relatively little, for example about $700 a month for a 200sf studio. You get what you pay for — this is market rate — but you don’t have to spend much if you don’t want to. Here is one example: a 16.20m3 studio in central Shinjuku-ku, in a nice modern building, with a balcony, a six-minute walk from the train station, for 68,000 yen (about $620) per month. Young people wishing to minimize expenses will often split an apartment like this, bringing their housing costs to about $400/month including utilities. Tokyo apartments tend to be very small, not because you can’t get a larger place if you want, but because people would rather spend their money on other things.

Millions of cheap, market-rate apartments, with thousands available for rent on any day of the week. No rent controls and no “affordable housing” subsidies, inevitably available to only a lucky few. “Gentrification” and “displacement” are never an issue, because you can easily move to one of thousands of alternatives always available. If San Francisco was built to a density of 40,000 per square mile, more than twice as many people could live there.

This is what $620 gets you in Tokyo. A small apartment in a nice new building, in a nice neighborhood, in a central location, 6 minutes from a train station.

Despite all the new construction, Tokyo is still one of the most expensive cities in the world for apartment rentals, on a per-square-meter basis. But, you just don’t have to rent very many square meters. This data from 2015 is somewhat outdated, but gives the basic picture:

No Car necessary. With Tokyo’s superlative train system, you don’t need an automobile. Just a cheap monthly train pass.

No bad neighborhoods. There are more fashionable neighborhoods, and also working-class neighborhoods, but there are basically no bad (ugly, dirty, crime-ridden) neighborhoods in Tokyo. You could live in a comfortable and dignified (but modest) manner just about anywhere. Local “koban” police outposts are found in every neighborhood, keeping an eye on trouble. This is possible in part because of the high density, about 40,000 per square mile typical in central areas. A policeman has to patrol only a very small area.

Acceptable schools. Japanese public schools are rarely great, but also rarely awful. You don’t have to play the “neighborhood with good schools” game so common in the U.S.

Narrow Streets for People. The streets in residential areas are quiet (very little auto traffic), humane, pleasant and safe for children and the elderly. You aren’t struggling constantly with unpleasant urban environments. You don’t have to own a suburban yard as a way to compensate for a city that is intolerably ugly for raising a family.

Plenty of parks. From tiny neighborhood “pocket” parks to big destination parks, there are plenty of places for children to play and adults to relax, often very close to the house. You don’t need to have your own private yard as a refuge from urban unpleasantness

Small neighborhood park.
Large “destination” park.

If you add it all up, you can see that you can live comfortably in Tokyo — even in one of the more fashionable neighborhoods — for as little as $1000 a month, a minimum-wage salary. On the other hand, you could also spend that much for dinner if you wanted to.

Unfortunately, in the U.S., we have created a situation where cities are either too expensive, or too ugly/unsafe/dismal/crime-ridden/unfit for families and children to endure. The result is that living is very expensive. You have to pay a lot either to get into those urban neighborhoods that are deemed acceptable to middle-class values, or you have to pay a lot to get into a suburban automobile-dependent detached-single-family suburb.

We should imagine that city living is cheap, clean, beautiful and fun. You don’t need a car. You don’t need a big house. You don’t need a big yard. What we find is that even those people that don’t have a lot of income — even a minimum-wage income — can live a decent and respectable middle-class life. They live modestly, but they are not struggling to get by.

Eventually, we can see that only dense city living can provide this. Only dense city living can allow living without an automobile comfortably, or very low housing costs in multifamily apartments instead of detached housing — all at market rate. You need a lot of density to make transit systems viable at low cost and a high number of trains or buses per hour. You need a lot of density to put parks within walking distance of residences, or to be able to walk to the public library, school and supermarket.

Many of our difficulties with lower income or even homeless people today won’t be solved by giving them more money, but by creating an environment where you don’t need much money to get by.

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Nathan Lewis was formerly the chief international economist of a firm that provided investment research for institutions. He now works for an asset management company based in New York. Lewis has written for the Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Japan Times, Pravda, and other publications. He has appeared on financial television in the United States, Japan, and the Middle East.
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