Rising prices have led ordinary people to ensure their daily living expenses first, reducing the purchasing power of bulk commodities. Rising prices will lead to the introduction of relevant policies to curb prices, such as raising the deposit reserve ratio and raising interest rates.
In particular, raising interest rates will increase the pressure on loans to buy a house, reduce the rate of return, slow the sales of real estate, and people who invest in real estate will be trapped. Therefore, as prices rise, house prices will inevitably rise.
Extended data:
House prices have gone up, and cabbage dealers will raise the price of vegetables in order to buy a house. When the price of cabbage goes up, workers will ask for a raise, and construction workers will ask for a raise. When the developer's cost rises, the house price will rise.
In the next period of time, developers in the market will use this as an excuse to raise prices, and then house prices and prices will fall into a strange circle of rising, but in this case, the rise of house prices has played a very destructive role, and house prices have been greatly overestimated in the short term. As a result, a large number of bubbles appeared, and the market gradually became unreasonable.