This is a really, really stupid question.
because the previous generation were all robber barons that drained the world for their personal gain at the expense of the children they insisted on having.
I watched my own father illicitly borrow millions of dollars by bullshitting other rich boomers, acquire vast acres of property across the country, promise the family he would pass it all down to us and our futures were set, then have everything taken away by courts as he and and the rest of my family drank themselves to death after snorting away every family assets on cocaine and other drugs.
I lost everything I owned after investing my time and energy into being there for my family and they just crashed out without any accountability to their next generation. Starting over in the middle of my life from nothing. I may never own property of any kind. I probably will never retire.
I feel like it was all just a microcosm view of what’s happening broadly. The legacy of the boomer generation is going to be crushing us for a century to come or maybe forever.
Article title writer pictured here
Wages didn’t increase at the rate of inflation for like 80 years. The USA is now a shithole country in general and emigration out has reached all time highs, kids don’t want to buy homes here. All of the overseas investors looking to purchase US properties no longer trust in the USA due to volatility due to an actual dictatorship forming and heavy fines and tariffs being put in place by countries on either side of the issue.
I could go on.
Jesus fuckin christ are these people seriously asking that question??
It must be because of those dang woke DEI!
Homes are fucking expensive. I couldn’t afford to buy a house in most markets at current prices. I have no idea how people are able to buy homes today.
Even my neighbor down the street…1st home for him, wife, and 2 year old kid. He tried to sell because he didn’t understand how property taxes worked. The previous owner of 30 years payed 1.5K a year. He bought the home and was hit with a 15K tax bill. He couldn’t afford it and thought his bill would also be 1.5K. The closing agent and real estate agent didn’t explain anything to him. They were just happy to collect commission and fees on a very expensive house.
Ah, a Californian
This doesn’t make sense to me.
In my state the bank pays the property taxes. Its included in the monthly mortgage and goes into an escrow account for taxes.
I guess the rules vary by state.
Some places cap property tax increases per year, or even have a flat rate based on purchase price (or appraisal?) that never goes up… until you sell the house to someone new. Then the tax gets recalculated based on the current value of the house. So if the price of the house went up 10x in those 30 years, the tax is going to be 10x higher. It’s actually beneficial to the taxpayer IMO to have a consistent predictable tax that doesn’t go up over time if your neighborhood gets gentrified or whatever and home prices skyrocket.
That part makes more sense. In my state the tax on the house goes up. It’s not locked like that.
I feel like it’s an oversight to not calculate the new tax rate and include it as cost to the buyer.
The bank losses out on the loan if you foreclose on it. They make money on the interest not the sale.
The only one who makes out on a bad sale like that is the realtor.
The bank usually pays taxes and Insurance from the escrow account. You pay into escrow every month. If insurance goes up, so does the amount you pay into escrow
That is only if your mortgage was written that way. I don’t know if mortgages are “usually” written that way, but only my first mortgage had an escrow account.
I love it when a headline makes me audibly laugh, thought this was the onion for a second
A 7% interest rate doesn’t help
I had two houses at that interest rate in the 2000’s. The wage to house price was still reasonable then. Made $40k, paid $88k for a 3/2 in middle class suburban Tampa. I’m making 30% more now but houses are 400% more.
Not on top of the wild overvaluation.
Maybe it has something to with home prices rising an average of about 7.5 % per year over the last 10 years which means more than doubling.
Bought my house 2 years ago and it had doubled in price since 2013.
Ya housing prices right now are a joke. What nobodies talking about is it doesn’t only affect buyers. Owners are getting screwed on their taxes. I am paying $500/month more this year than last in taxes alone.
capitalism. there. article done.
Because those who make the rules don’t want you to own shit.
Everyone I know around my age that have purchased either bought before 2019 in the smaller cities of Texas where it was a house or it was sometime 2020-2022 when rates were sub 4% and home prices didn’t explode yet and those were condos. Also everyone was dual income or it was to co-own a house. I know one person that purchased by themselves but they sleep in the smallest room and rent out every other room to siblings and friends
Since some point in 2022, the only people I know that bought a home were a married late 30s couple that were high income and the home was like 70+ years old and a pipe burst and there turned out to be a lot of mold that made it unlivable for a period of time
Because the only part of the economy doing well is home values
I hear many millennials prefer to live in their cars. 🤡