Two generations ago we had all kinds of housing being built including lots of modest postwar tract homes for returning GIs and that sort of thing. So housing across the board was relatively affordable and as middle class folks moved up it made housing available for folks from lower incomes. We don’t do that any more. Most new housing is very high end and very restricted, especially here in the west coast which has created housing shortages all up and down the income ladder. That is the deliberate result of government policy that has basically made it illegal to build the sort of housing that was most commonly built in the 1950s and 1960s. In the early 1970s my parents bought a modest single family home of maybe 2000 sf on a single teacher’s salary in Oregon as my mom didn’t work. That would be utterly impossible today and such houses aren’t even hardly getting built anymore because they are against the law in most new subdivisions.nett wrote: ↑Tue Nov 16, 2021 1:58 pmOk, I see where you are coming from, but it sounds an awful lot like trickle down reaganomics, which I find classist, and unpalatable, and delusional.Ken wrote: ↑Tue Nov 16, 2021 1:07 pm
Housing is expensive here on the west coast.
Yes, $200,000 homes would be nice but they don’t exist other than perhaps small studio condos. A $500,000 family home is still a huge improvement over a $1 million home that is required by law to be built in much of the land around here. Doing the math, if you buy a $500,000 home with 10% down that leaves a $450,000 mortgage which at current interest rates of 3.5% is about $2300/month for a 30 year mortgage. Call it $3,000/mo after taxes, insurance, maintenance, etc. That isn’t in reach if you are a single mom working at Wal-Mart, but a middle class 2-income family, say a nurse married to a teacher is going to have a household income in the $100k to $150k around here. That comes to gross income of roughly $8.5k to $12.5k per month of which $3,000/mo of housing costs is affordable and within the recommended 30% of gross income. Rents are going to be in the same ballpark for a single family home so you are stuck either way.
My larger point is that we don’t even allow much construction of $500,000 homes around here. Much of the land by law requires homes in the $1 million plus range, which gets subdivided by all the rest of us in a hundred different ways. Much of the rest of the country is similar.
And no, I don’t expect underprivileged lower income people to be able to buy $500,000 homes. We don’t generally build homes for poor people. That’s not the point. But if you build homes that are affordable to middle class people then they will move up and and the homes they leave behind are then more affordable for the people under them too move up. And so forth. That used to be how things worked in this country. There was much more opportunity for upward mobility. But not so much anymore. Right now used cars are ridiculously expensive because of the semi-conductor shortages preventing new cars from being built. It is part of the same cascade effect. Used cars don’t need new semiconductors but the supply constraints and price increases at the top affect the entire market all the way down to the bottom nevertheless.
Why do rich people deserve an enormous house, but poor people need to live in shacks?
Rich people will always be able to buy whatever kind of house they want. It’s not a question of “deserve” or not. But our government policies shouldn’t be so drastically tilted in their favor and against everyone else.
That is “systemic inequality” when it is tilted against everyone who is not wealthy. And it is systemic racism when it deliberately and disproportionately affects minority communities. The effect is racist even if the individual people involved are not racist themselves. That is all systemic racism means.