Surveys show that as many as 92% of Americans have cut back on spending due to rising prices. Record-low housing affordability is setting off a vicious cycle.
Surveys show that as many as 92% of Americans have cut back on spending due to rising prices. Record-low housing affordability is setting off a vicious cycle.
Just a moment...
"Record low affordability" is a really weird way of saying price gouging.
Part of the problem is that housing in the US is treated as a commodity and used for investment. Purchasing a house isn't just so you have someplace to live, but rather it's treated as an investment that must appreciate in value over its lifetime. This is in stark contrast to every other major living expense. You don't purchase a car and expect to be able to sell it for more than you paid for it a decade later, but somehow that's the expectation with housing.
In a traditional market prices would rise and fall to match supply and demand, but because housing is treated as an investment, there's a strong pressure to never let the prices fall. If someone can't make a profit selling their house they'll rent it out instead or even let it sit empty until such a time as they think they can make a profit selling it, which means the only way to reliably bring the prices of housing down in the US is to build new housing, and even then the effects of that are limited and highly localized. Outside of that the only time houses come down is in catastrophic events like the sub-prime mortgage fiasco.
Is just building more houses enough? I live in a brand new house in a brand new neighborhood. I bought right before COVID and since then my house has gone up 60k in value. I'm watching the builder raise their prices for the same floor plan by 60k to match.
I guess if you overbuild then maybe there's pressure for it to go down? But right now I'm seeing new build prices match inflation of the housing market even though building cost inflation aren't matching home valuation inflation.
Who the fuck thinks it's sustainable to keep raising the price of housing indefinitely? If people's salaries aren't also going up indefinitely, who will be able to afford to buy it?
Shhhh... It's only price gouging if it's gas stations during a weather crisis. All other companies doing it during (and after) a pandemic is called capitalism, and it's unamerican to not like that.