- Jan 16, 2019
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Make Homes Affordable Again
One reason Americans are so disenchanted with capitalism is that the national dream of home ownership is no longer within reach for much of the population. As a rule, housing becomes unaffordable when it takes up more than 30 per cent of a buyer’s income. Prices have been unaffordable in big cities for decades and have spiraled out of reach for a median US home in recent years.
Astonishingly, the US is building no more new homes and 80 per cent fewer “entry level” homes than it was half a century ago — when the population was much smaller. And the time it takes to complete a new multi-unit dwelling has doubled, with most of that increase coming in the past two decades — as “NIMBY” resistance spread.
Since 2000, according to Zillow, the average household income has doubled but the average price for its listings has tripled to $360,000. Over that period, the time it takes to save for a 20 per cent down payment has risen by nearly half to eleven years. And the share of income that goes to mortgage and insurance payments has risen by more than a third to 35 per cent — into the unaffordable zone.
Because developers are building homes much more slowly than Americans are forming new households, the shortage is growing by several hundred thousand residences a year. While consumer price inflation has receded to below 3 per cent, home prices are still rising by more than 5 per cent a year. True, voters continue to express anxiety about the cost of basic staples, but food and clothing account for a smaller share of household expenses than in the 1970s. Housing takes up a greater and growing share, and could become a pivotal election issue.
One reason Americans are so disenchanted with capitalism is that the national dream of home ownership is no longer within reach for much of the population. As a rule, housing becomes unaffordable when it takes up more than 30 per cent of a buyer’s income. Prices have been unaffordable in big cities for decades and have spiraled out of reach for a median US home in recent years.
Astonishingly, the US is building no more new homes and 80 per cent fewer “entry level” homes than it was half a century ago — when the population was much smaller. And the time it takes to complete a new multi-unit dwelling has doubled, with most of that increase coming in the past two decades — as “NIMBY” resistance spread.
Since 2000, according to Zillow, the average household income has doubled but the average price for its listings has tripled to $360,000. Over that period, the time it takes to save for a 20 per cent down payment has risen by nearly half to eleven years. And the share of income that goes to mortgage and insurance payments has risen by more than a third to 35 per cent — into the unaffordable zone.
Because developers are building homes much more slowly than Americans are forming new households, the shortage is growing by several hundred thousand residences a year. While consumer price inflation has receded to below 3 per cent, home prices are still rising by more than 5 per cent a year. True, voters continue to express anxiety about the cost of basic staples, but food and clothing account for a smaller share of household expenses than in the 1970s. Housing takes up a greater and growing share, and could become a pivotal election issue.