Housing Prices vs Income in the U.S. Over the Last 40 Years
Housing Prices vs Income in the U.S. Over the Last 40 Years
https://i.redd.it/f2fomit4c6og1.png
Posted by raishelannaa
10 Comments
dbqidan on
Well, it depends on which side you are on. For the lords and ladies, that’s gains.
avsurround on
That’s why 0DTEs are the way 🚀🚀🚀
RizzlerNerden on
Now add household debt and money supply to the picture
No_Feeling920 on
The illusion of prosperity.
suddenly-scrooge on
the first dingy one bed apartment I had out of college 15 years ago basically tracked my income, meaning it’s about the quality of place I can afford now after making a lot more money
EnvironmentalPear695 on
Shouldn’t we also consider these days it’s usually median household income for 2 earners? Back in the day it used to be only one earner in most households so the gap is even worse
Iconically_Lost on
You guys buying houses? I just had to a buy now, pay later with only 45% Interest on some fries.
WhyUPoor on
This chart by it self means nothing as household size has decreased because of all the new single mother households and the house size has increased a lot since 1985, do not be fooled by data presented without context.
10 Comments
Well, it depends on which side you are on. For the lords and ladies, that’s gains.
That’s why 0DTEs are the way 🚀🚀🚀
Now add household debt and money supply to the picture
The illusion of prosperity.
the first dingy one bed apartment I had out of college 15 years ago basically tracked my income, meaning it’s about the quality of place I can afford now after making a lot more money
Shouldn’t we also consider these days it’s usually median household income for 2 earners? Back in the day it used to be only one earner in most households so the gap is even worse
You guys buying houses? I just had to a buy now, pay later with only 45% Interest on some fries.
This chart by it self means nothing as household size has decreased because of all the new single mother households and the house size has increased a lot since 1985, do not be fooled by data presented without context.
by design
Average house was 900 square feet in 1900