You're choosing home ownership as THE key benchmark to measure prosperity/financial wellbeing. Although bad for many, the Thatcher years were good for me - so Im glad you've so firmly bought into her vision of aspiration to home ownership/personal assets - rather than the socialist vision of state housing for all. House ownership is not a "right" nor is it actually a necessity (lots of Countries have large populations of renters) and it is cyclical - I have lost money on houses - that was common in the early 90's.
You could run a similar bar charts on
- Exotic or long haul or frequent travel & "gap years"
- Expensive personal gadgets, phones
- Costly Gym memberships
- Designer clothes & luxury goods
- Leisure time & activities/hobbies
- Personal grooming, Hairdressing and Nails
- Plastic surgery tweaks and expensive diets
- Expensive foodstuffs/takeaways - not cooked from scratch
- Ridiculously priced dogs
In every one of these of these aspects (some not entirely serious) your generational bar charts would run in the opposite direction !!!
I think you could make this point better without resorting to highlighting that sort of frivolous spending, tbh. If we're going to do that, I could equally point out that my dad's generation were able to go to the pub for a couple of pints after work literally every day.
There are legitimate areas where older generations had it worse. One good area to look is the percentage of their salary spent on certain items. So if we compare what percentage of people's salaries was typically spent on various items in around 1970 compared to today...
This is from ChatGPT, but it kinda reflects what I've seen on more legitimate sources, I just couldn't be arsed ploughing through them all.
Housing and utilities: 12-16% vs 18-25% (way higher now)
Food: 25% vs 11% (way lower now)
Clothing: 10-12% vs 3% (way lower now)
Transport: 8-10% vs 14% (higher now)
recreation/culture: 6-8% vs 11-12% (higher now)
restaurants/hotels/holidays: 3-5% vs 7-9% (way higher now)
communications: 0% vs 3-4% (way higher now)
Alcohol and tobacco: 7-9% vs 2% (way lower now)
Household goods: 6% for both
It's worth mentioning that both groups have frivolous spending on there, and this narrative of 'never went on any holidays' or 'stop spending your money on Starbucks and avocado toast' falls a little flat from a generation that was spending a huge percentage of their income on fags and booze.
People these days have benefited from a huge drop in the cost of things like food, clothing, electronics, travel, etc. But they've subsequently the victim of huge increases in other areas like housing, utilities and transport (transport is mostly a result of car ownership, which is obviously a quality of life improvement, but also in many cases a necessity to access decent job opportunities). It's worth mentioning of course that this is a percentage of household income, and these days, a household income is often two people, so in real terms, that probably hides the amount that things have swung against the younger generation.
For young people, there are also new categories of outgoings. The rise of dual income households mean that a young family living in London, for example, could be paying 20% of their income in childcare. And particularly relevant to this thread, the complete removal of things like final salary pensions mean that young people today are having to invest more of their money in their own future.
I think the main difference, however, is that the areas where older generations had it easier were things that were wealth builders. Sure, food is cheaper now, clothes are cheaper now, technology is cheaper now, but those things are disposable. Older people were starting work at a time where wealth-building assets like houses and pensions were easier to come by. Sure, it might be a struggle to buy a house while also paying way more for other costs of living, but there's an end in sight. For young people these days renting, they don't see that end in sight. They just see a future where the cost of rent goes up and up and up, and there's no stage where it's been paid off.