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Tony F.'s avatar

Agree with the article, but I'll provide a 'careful what you wish for' caveat.

Let's assume the market corrects itself; either because it crashes as the pool of buyers for $1M+ homes isn't there or smart policies across the country start bringing sanity back to the market. Now, the pace of those kinds of adjustments are incredibly hard to predict. If it happens fast, who feels the most pain?

Not the boomers and GenXers who bought cheap and now have substantial paper wealth. My house it probably worth a bit more than double what I paid for it a dozen years ago on paper, but that doesn't really impact my day-to-day life. And, if the market suddenly corrects by 30 - 50%? I'll still have pretty substantial gains by any historic standard.

Now, think about the young family that just leveraged everything to get one of those million dollar homes. They had to put a quarter of a million down and are still carrying a pretty hefty mortgage. A correction wipes out the equity (and any LOC) and they still have to carry a really huge mortgage in the face of increasing interest rates.

I worry about those families and think we need to tread carefully as we fix this problem. I'm actually *not* sure what the appropriate approach is. We need more housing and everything people are proposing (streamlined zoning, YIMBY, etc) are the right thing to do. But potentially some young families may get squeezed twice -- once paying at the top of the market and again as the market corrects.

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Mark Ch's avatar

💯 I, an early gen x-er, have been telling you millennials to support the most libertarian Conservative candidate since you were old enough to vote. I haven't got much traction. I confidently expect to be saying "I told you so" for the rest of my life. Enjoy!

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