My little cottage has almost doubled in price since 2017 when we bought it.
So, here is my very dumb, uneducated take on the story behind the numbers in the WSJ article. I have seen other stories about how great it is that the "core" middle class is now moving to the "penthouse in the sky." Here is a picture I took of a graph that made the same case:
Attachment 6772
Here is the analysis:
https://www.aei.org/research-product...-middle-class/
And here is my feeling about affordability.
The more people who are richer than Joe Shmo, the more the affluent class drives prices up. Isn't the free market all about "what the market will bear?" Well, if 75% of the people think a little shack on the beach is worth a half a million dollars to them, it limits the opportunity for people like the grandfather who purchased it two generations ago for a cheap price.
When it comes to food, 75% say, "oh, $15.00/lb for steak! No big deal!" And 25% are saying, "I'm going to have to look for ground beef in the expired pile." And this isn't just for low-income earners. if things are skyrocketing beautifully for the nouveau riche, what's happening to all the Baby Boomers who are retiring and relying on Social Security for the most part. They are presented with a double whammy--not only do they have too little in their limited stash to comfortably get by, but now basic needs are rising. You can say "too bad--you should have planned better," but until you've walked in the shoes of everyone who is struggling today, it's unfair to blame the nouveau poorer core middle class for feeling squeezed.
It just warps the value of everything when 75% of the people have higher thresholds of affordability.
Now, I don't know what these lines mean in terms of income and buying power because I only scanned the analysis. I'm just looking at the picture that tells me that the "core" middle class is no longer "core" in the way that the middle class was in the post-war years. That's my other point of contention--what is the definition of prosperity? That's a whole other thing that these financial analyses don't do a good job of explaining. We felt pretty good in the 50s and 60s about our place in the economic spectrum. But now we have so many cultural forces that are diminishing our core values that "affordability" is an exercise in scarcity of other aspects of a good life. And we can't totally blame people whose worldviews are shaped by forces outside themselves.
I have no idea if this makes any sense, but I'm open to discussion. I'm a qualitative (not quantitative) researcher for a reason--statistics aren't my strong suit, so I'd love to see counterarguments.