Flbt
AH elite
Talking of housesWhile this simplistic condescending approach may make older folks feel superior. It basically is not true when it comes to many areas. Particularly housing.
BTW, I am almost 60 if it helps give you perspective.
Where I live housing costs have gone insane, Starbucks Latte or not.
Let me give you a simple example. My dad bought a house in 1972 for $32,000. The raw number is not important. It was about a 2000 square foot home in a nice neighbourhood and at the time $32,000 was a solid middle class income. So the ratio of home cost to annual income was about 1:1.
Now where I live the average home costs just over $1,000,000. And the average income is probably around $100,000 a year. That makes the home cost to income ratio about 10:1. A staggering difference.
There are also demographic issues going on. There is a large cohort of people who are not empty nesters and retirees who are now downsizing their homes and competing with first time homebuyers for bungaloos and townhomes driving up the proportionate cost of entry level homes even more. The young folks can't outbid the old folks for entry level homes and they can't afford to buy the big places they are leaving. Tough spot.
If you want a ton more data to support housing costs going up way faster than income it is not hard to find.
Employers now are much less likely to offer pensions than they used to, making it harder to achieve retirement income.
The cost of a post secondary education has gone up way faster than inflation or wages, and many more jobs now require a post secondary degree to even get an interview. The topic is well studied and is often referred to as "education inflation." It's a real problem, even in Canada where tuitions are often subsidized.
Even on the manufacturing end it is a tougher way to make a living than ever. In the United States the year with the highest manufacturing output (adjusted for inflation) was 2024. However the year with the highest employment in manufacturing was 1972 (or 74?). So while worker productivity has gone up over the last 50 years has gone way up, the number of manufacturing workers needed has gone down due to mechanization and computerization. This trend looks to accelerate rather than reverse.
I could go on but the picture is clear. It is tough out there for young people.
To be honest I get a little bit embarrassed when people who are established (like me) sit back, pat themselves on the belly and rant on about how "if only young people were more like us they would all be fine." The fact is we grew up in a rare period of great opportunity. We should be grateful not condescending.
Perhaps instead of blowing hot air about young people we could turn some of that supposed wisdom we have accumulated to helping young folks solve the new challenges they face. But that would require us to stop patting ourselves on the back and give a shit about the young people in our communities so I guess it is a huge ask.
I inherited a old block house 900sq ft. My aunt and uncle payed 5500$ for it and 8 acers of land in 1950.
I turned down 129k for it and 2 acers it’s on.
They want to take it down and build another house on the 2 acers.
