Worth watching. If you follow any social media other than this site it is full of the economic woes of the millennial generations in comparison to Boomers. This is a healthy dose of economic reality that no one who needs it will see.
Without trying to be offensive here, I've never seen such a boomer-y video.
He's trying to justify the complete unaffordability of the American Dream for an entire generation just because 'well, if you're lucky enough to already have it, now it's even better than ever'. Wow, just wow.
The accepted path to financial stability in this country has been pretty simple for at least 80 years. Get job, buy house, retire, send kids to college so they can build a better future for themselves. A couple cars optional.
So let's dig into all of those categories, starting with houses.
Most young people aren't worrying about how big their house is, or how nice it is. They're worrying about ever being able to buy any house whatsoever.
That's the challenge for the average 'young person'; give me a place that I can buy for less than 9x my salary, which isn't going to cost 45% of my entire take home pay just in the mortgage payment, which one day may allow me to finally, finally build some wealth.
1000sqft or 5000sqft, who cares. A home. Any home. Some prospect of one day not having crippling monthly rent (which incidentally also costs 2x what it did in the 'good old days' - $108 against a $9,870 median household income, vs $1629 against a $83730 one... you do the math).
Anyhow, that wouldn't have been an unreasonable ask for median wage households in the 70s. Make an average wage of $9,870pa, save 20% of your income for 3 years to sort a deposit, buy an average house for $23,600. 2.5x salary all in, a mortgage balance of roughly 1.8x salary, so affordable interest. Not impossible, even in those few years with crazy high interest rates.
(
https://www.census.gov/library/publications/1971/demo/p60-80.html)
(
https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/nrs/tables/time-series/historical-nrs/uspricemon.pdf).
Even minimum wage at $1.60/hr got you a house for 7x annual earnings if you're working 40hrs/week on average (note - better than median wage today). Sure, it might not have AC and it might 'only' be 1400sqft, but hey, you can always upgrade later when you have accumulated some equity.
Now, hitting that same affordability threshold as 1970s median wage is going to need the best part of 160k a year (which, to remind is roughly 97th percentile for people in their 20s -
https://dqydj.com/average-median-top-income-by-age-percentiles/) in most markets. 2.5x salary all in.
Arguably even that isn't enough to match the 1970's median wages with regards to housing. Even at 160k, 20% of your income for 3 years does get you a house deposit, but only of 23%. The same savings rate in 1970 gave you 30%. At median wage.
Make 45k/yr (the median for those in their 20s -
https://www.forbes.com/advisor/business/average-salary-by-age/). Forget it. Totally impossible. To remind, median US house price is $410,000 (
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MSPUS). Scraping together a 10% deposity is going to take 5 years saving 20%. Then you have a balance of $369,000, which means a mortgage of $2,432/month. Your total take home is only going to be $3,182. A mortgage of 76% of take home pay? I think not.
You would have a better chance of flipping burgers for minimum wage and buying a house in 1970 vs buying one on median wage today. Simple math.
Same with cars. A 2025 car is way better than a 1975 car, sure. But then, cars in 1975 didn't cost 8 months salary, so... meh.
Remember, $9,870 median household income, which incidentally is often from a single earner:
Today:
Remember, median household income is $83,730 (
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MEHOINUSA672N), yet the average new car costs $49,740 (
https://www.kbb.com/car-news/average-new-car-price-flirting-with-record/)
As it happens, I bought a modern Dodge Challenger in 2020. A Hellcat WB, so the modern equivalent to the 426 model above. It cost me a bit over $72,000. Think on that.
College? A years tuition in 1970; $394. 4% of median household income. A years tuition in 2025; $10,340. 12% of median household income. 3x worse. Yet people in the 1970s thought it was too expensive back then to send their kids. Yeah, that says a lot...
All the qualifiers of the American dream are completely unaffordable to most, so what's left?
Well, he's right that 'luxuries' are pretty cheap now. Flights are cheap, nice clothes are cheap. Actually, some basics of survival are pretty cheap too; food as an example.
So young people give up on growing their financial stability, and doom spend. You can afford to survive, you can afford to eat out, you can even have nice things. But you can't afford education, and you have no prospect of not paying rent one day. Retirement... eh... probably not. So you might as well enjoy the moment, not like tomorrow will be any better.
IMO, that's why so many young people do the 'luxury poverty' thing. No degree, no house, no car, no retirement savings, but a fancy watch and fancy vacations and lots of eating out. Hey, I get it. A bit of hard work and that's achievable... take what joy you can. There is realistically no opportunity cost because all the 'responsible' things you could spend that money on instead? They're not viable.
Then the boomers judge them for it and call it financial irresponsibility... lol.