Why are people no longer buying homes?

Why are people no longer buying homes?

Property is finite, so home ownership is incompatible with population growth.

I haven't enough money for food every month.

Lack of job security.

500k plywood coffin

...

Stagnant/diminishing incomes

Because the fucking things cost a fortune and the banks aint lending. Tight cunts.

$$$

We may never know...

fuck paying off a loan for 15 years.

because the jews are blocking trump from implementing his policies in every step of the way.


and people feel it.

Average down payment of 20% is too high. Aside from directly reducing the principal, it is the same as making larger payments with no pre-payment penalty. Saving is very difficult due to higher cost of very basic things.

However, citizens owning property seems to go against the narrative being spun right now.

Home costs keep rising while wages stagnate.

That looks like a correction if I ever saw one. The housing market bubble was going on before the tech bubble even.

Immigrants don't buy homes. I bet you percentage wise white home ownership has gone up

b-because I inherited mine

overpriced houses and shit tier wages

Only idiots wants to borrow money from (((banks))) and live 30 yearsin debt

I rent a townhome from a white couple

All my neighbors are asians and pajeets or mexicans. The only folks i know that rent are the white girls across the street that just moved out.

Asians are buying up more shit that you’d expect dude

my parents bought a decent suburban house with a pool in Florida for 70k in 1997. the same house is worth like 400k now and I STILL dont make as much as either of my parents did back then, which was like 12 bucks an hour (and yes i have a degree)

Because boomers with their 4+ vacation homes that are never used.

I'm retarded

No monies

...

avocado latte

Overpriced. Broke. Don't trust banks.

Why double in DC?

It was a big bubble. Owning your own home, as simple as it may sound, comes with responsibilities that not all can handle. As the government pushed for a
>home for everyone
policy, the market pushed back. The government continued to push for it until it collapsed. The effects were felt world wide due to socialist + globalist dogma which insisted that spreading the risk out far enough was enough to act as a tourniquet. The metaphor doesn't really make sense, but that's not because it is an inaccurate metaphor. It doesn't make sense because the socialist theory behind it does not reflect reality.

My guess is that tech sector lobbyists have a lot to do with it. Add to that highly paid internships and low level government socialite type jobs, and it would account for a lot of it.

>All these burgers complaining about house prices

You really don't know how good you have it

I cant afford that shit yet and don't want to go into debt to the kikes