Exactly. "There's no automatic right to own a house" is the usual response, to which I ask "Why the fuck not?"
Why shouldn't somebody working full time in one of the richest countries in the world have the expectation of earning enough money to buy a house if they want? It was the case for a good chunk of the 20th century, give or take. There's million reasons why it's a good thing. For a start, people who own have a stake in society, which improves absolutely everything else. Landlords do the legal minimum. Imagine trying to deal with something like the climate crisis with a country full of houses with the least energy-efficient appliances, glazing and insulation, because the landlord doesn't give a shit how much the electricity bills are. I've rented most of my life, (not even in cheap places - my place has a gym and swimming pool), and I've never had anything other than the cheapest fridge in the shop.
As you point out, this is not just about a single-earner working in a supermarket not being able to buy a house. We're getting to the stage where professionals who've been to university for 4 or 5 years in a two-income household not being able to buy a house. I know one couple who managed it in London. They both have master's degrees and work full time. They first had to save for years and borrow a bit from her parents to get the first flat. They then got extremely lucky with a massive price increase, and he got a big payoff when the company he worked for was sold (he had shares as part of his pay without knowing it). They openly say that if either of those things didn't happen, they'd still be in the flat aged 40 with a new baby. Now they're in a small 2 up 2 down with an unfinished hall and bedroom. The sort of situation my parents were in in their mid-20s. And the increase in the mortgage has just wiped out their pay rises for this year. It's insanely difficult even for those lucky enough to be able to buy.
I highlighted your interesting question.
Why do you say it is one of the richest countries in the world?
Surely, your own answer, given the rest of your post, would suggest it isn’t, would it not?
When you try to buy a house, who are you trying to buy it from? Is THAT person rich? How did THEY buy the house?
It seems that the MARKET has determined the price of a residential home, and that market is driven by workers.
Now, I understand that interest rates have made mortgages more expensive, and if the people trying to sell are getting the price they want, it makes the monthly payment more expensive. Got it. But that has always been the case!
Just wait, as interest rates come down, prices who go up quickly again, because you can now afford more house.
It might not be a popular opinion, but education level is often a predictor of future earnings, and those future earnings go up quicker because there are usually less qualified candidates and often higher demand for the jobs.
Simple example:
If I earn $50 and you earn $70. We both get 10% raises every year.
$55/77
$60/85…in just 2 yrs, the higher earner has increased their income by 50% MORE, even with the same raise!
Now, if there is higher demand than supply of decent homes, then prices go higher, and yet there are still enough people making the higher incomes to cover the higher cost of the homes.
And, not only does it drive up the prices of higher cost/quality homes, but the low supply of lower cost/quality homes also drives up the cost of those homes, making it harder to afford even less desirable homes.
So, what to do in the era of council houses being sold and prices increasing? It’s not the government driving up the prices…unless you agree that green space should be reduced to allow for significant levels of low cost owner-occupied housing, which does require government intervention via planning permissions and even the release of public lands.
Planning permission is a joke in Britain. Everyone wants to protect everything, yet everyone complains about land and home prices?!
I can buy land almost anywhere in the USA and build almost anything I want on it.
Can’t you just smell the freedom?!