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John Stark's avatar

We could do things to make housing cheaper, and we should. But I fear that the underlying problem is a prosperity crisis, not just a housing crisis. The decades of prosperity after World War II established an unrealistic norm, based on historical events that won't be repeated.

John DeMarco's avatar

As a millennial HENRY(the Y is never coming), this article hits. The institutions benefit the incumbent, whether it's the existing homeowner or the Old. Benefits have also gone to capital and not labor (which is the right thing economically, capital takes risks that labor doesn't). So, if you're young you don't have capital and you have the institutions working against you.

Thinking of myself, I do relatively the same "job" my grandfather did and my uncle did. Three generations. I'm far more "productive", mostly due to technology, but my income in real terms is less. My purchasing power is even lower. And I'm a skilled professional. If you're a kid just graduating college, it's even worse. You cannot build wealth with just labor today. It's impossible for even the above average person. That's why the young are dropping out.

The answer isn't clear. The Progressive push a "wealth tax" without addressing the role government and the Fed play in protecting and subsidizing the incumbent (whether it's bailouts, ZIRP, QE, corporate welfare, etc.) I don't know what the Right or MAGA types offer other than less freedom and liberty.

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