Water has always occupied an important part of human history, but how does it affect specific features of human development? Merrie-Wisner's book "Discovering the Past of the World: Looking at the Evidence" provides evidence as to how stable water supply affects human societal progress, and "technologies that require water supply How can we stabilize the political and legal development? "(35). The answer is that water has had a great influence on each of these developments.
Furthermore, there is not enough evidence on the global scale to suggest that humanity is approaching another major leap of democracy. On the contrary, over the past few years, the global fate of political freedom can be said to have led to major fluctuations between the recession and recovery, not fundamental. According to "The World's Freedom in 2012" - the latest version of the annual survey of civil liberties and political rights at Freedom House - the sixth consecutive year of world democracy in 2011 was disappointing; this is disappointing for 40 years of investigation It is the longest decline in history. This number, which is the highest point of election democracy for 123 years until 2010, has fallen to 115, the lowest level since 1995, but it recovered in part to 117 in 2011. In 2010 and 2011 there are 87 people, less than 90 people.
In past blogs, I looked up various evidences to prove what is going on in the UK housing market. This suggests that the housing crisis is not the result of housing shortage. On the contrary, housing prices have soared in the past 20 years due to various financial factors such as low interest rates worldwide, interest in the real estate market in London, deregulation of the mortgage market. One objection from my point of view is based on recent trends in the size of family in the UK. According to the National Statistics Bureau's Labor Force Survey (LFS), the government predicts that households will shrink and that more houses will be needed, but it seems that the number of households has grown from 36 in 2010 to 39 last year. Of course, this is believed by some people to prove that family formation is limited by high housing costs and that people are forced to live in larger families than they desire.
Last week I posted a blog in the past two decades to see what happened to UK housing and housing. The main purpose is to ascertain whether there is evidence that the sharp rise in London's housing prices since the beginning of the century is due to lack of a place to live. The data from the two sources shows that the number of homes in London and the Southeast has increased much faster than the number of households (as in other areas). As a result, the number of houses in London exceeded 200,000 in 2015.