>That means the buyer does not have choices in their preferred price range and must buy above what they actually want
But we don't see this happening though. Even in this scenario, there would still be downward price pressure. The market should (or would, rather) reach some equilibrium here.
Instead what we see is UPWARD price pressure and vacancy despite legitimate market forces and environment.
I've kind of already laid it out in the previous post but the next question anyone should have is "why is that happening?"
And it's not because the units don't exist or need to be built.