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Six Must Reads for the CRE Industry on Dec. 29, 2020


Six Must Reads for the CRE Industry Today (Dec. 29, 2020)
Supermarket chains rethink their reliance on Instacart, reports the Wall Street Journal. The Real Deal ranks the most active New York City developers of 2020. And The New York Times looks at how this year has exacerbated inequality while shielding the well-off from encountering it in everyday life. These are among today’s must reads from around the commercial real estate industry.
The Year Inequality Became Less Visible, and More Visible Than Ever“Americans also stopped broadly sharing libraries, movie theaters, train stations and public school classrooms, the spaces that still created common experience in increasingly unequal communities. Even the D.M.V., with its cross-section of life in a single room, wasn’t that anymore. Instead, people who could afford it retreated into smaller, more secure worlds during the pandemic. And that has made it harder to see all the inequality that worsened this year: the ....

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The Year Inequality Became Less Visible, and More Visible Than Ever


The Year Inequality Became Less Visible, and More Visible Than Ever
Even as shared public spaces emptied out, the gap between the economically privileged and the precarious became impossible to ignore.
Grand Central Terminal during rush hour as lockdowns began in March.Credit.Ashley Gilbertson for The New York Times
Dec. 28, 2020
This year, many Americans left the places where it was still possible to encounter one another. White-collar workers stopped going downtown, past homeless encampments and to lunch counters with minimum-wage staff. The well-off stopped riding public transit, where in some cities they once sat alongside commuting students and custodial workers. Diners stopped eating in restaurants, where their tips formed the wages of the people who served them. ....

Year Inequality Became Less Visible , More Visible Than , மேலும் தெரியும் விட ,