In San Francisco, far from the picturesque, winding streets in the hills, a glistening skyscraper represents how the country's tech titans have transformed the city -- and made it one of the world's most expensive places to live.
The figures are mind-boggling: average monthly rent for a two-room apartment in the city by the bay now runs to USD 3,700, the highest in the United States.
And a household of four with annual earnings of less than USD 117,400 is officially considered "low income."
Cary McClelland, whose 2018 book "Silicon City" examines how the area has changed, says: "We see now a kind of homelessness that did not occur before -- people who work, that is new."
Servane Valentin, a French realtor, recalled that as of 2012 and 2013, "we saw young 'geeks' in their 20s and 30s arriving with much higher salaries and had no idea about money."
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