David Graham
1 min readNov 6, 2023

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Thanks, Albert, an interesting comment. But unlikely, due to America’s greater size, there are more places that you would call central hubs.

Also, due to the UK’s smaller size, and much higher population density, regional mobility is much much higher in the UK, hence, why there are fewer central hubs.

So yeah, it’s an interesting thought, but I doubt it would play out simply due to the differences in geography. For example, if you look at the UK, you can see the difference between the North and the South, and prices go up the further south you get.

Whereas in America, the further from a central hub you get, the lower the prices, the closer the higher, just like in the UK, but because there are more central hubs the trend has more fluidity. So, America’s greater size creates a push to create more central hubs, which likely evens out any potential cross-regional gaps between US and UK property prices, especially considering how interlinked the Anglo world is.

But yeah, interesting comment, Albert, thanks for sharing!

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David Graham
David Graham

Written by David Graham

Due to injury I write using voice dictation software. Lover of psychology, science, humour, history, fiction & self-improvement. https://linktr.ee/DavidGraham86

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