Arizona's Senator Ruben Gallego just floated an interesting idea—using employment-based visa programs as a backdoor to funnel more foreign capital into America's struggling housing sector. It's the newest play from Washington trying to tackle the affordability nightmare that's been squeezing buyers across the country.
The logic? Tie investment pathways to immigration policy, potentially creating dual incentives. Foreign investors get residency tracks while injecting liquidity into residential markets. Whether this actually makes homes more affordable for average Americans or just inflates prices further remains the billion-dollar question.
Washington keeps throwing proposals at the wall. This one's got layers—immigration reform meets real estate stimulus. Could get messy.
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AirdropChaser
· 4h ago
Another wild idea from Washington... Bringing in foreign capital can stabilize housing prices? I doubt it. In the end, it just raises the threshold.
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BugBountyHunter
· 10h ago
Here we go again? Bringing in foreign capital will lower housing prices—why does that sound like opening a backdoor for property speculators to me? In the end, ordinary people still can't afford to buy.
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TerraNeverForget
· 11h ago
Another Washington gimmick—can’t understand how they came up with using visas to save the housing market... Isn’t this just a disguised way to let foreign capital in and drive up housing prices?
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LiquidationSurvivor
· 11h ago
It's just another bunch of scams. To put it plainly, it's about letting wealthy foreigners speculate on real estate, making it even more unaffordable for ordinary people.
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On-ChainDiver
· 11h ago
Here we go again, here we go again. This trick is really something... Using visas to attract foreign capital to speculate in real estate. They call it "liquidity," but in reality, it's just another way to flood the market with money. Ordinary Americans can't afford homes, and Washington's solution is to bring in more big investors. That's the logic.
Arizona's Senator Ruben Gallego just floated an interesting idea—using employment-based visa programs as a backdoor to funnel more foreign capital into America's struggling housing sector. It's the newest play from Washington trying to tackle the affordability nightmare that's been squeezing buyers across the country.
The logic? Tie investment pathways to immigration policy, potentially creating dual incentives. Foreign investors get residency tracks while injecting liquidity into residential markets. Whether this actually makes homes more affordable for average Americans or just inflates prices further remains the billion-dollar question.
Washington keeps throwing proposals at the wall. This one's got layers—immigration reform meets real estate stimulus. Could get messy.