Is this really a “soft landing?”

Sharing is Caring!

U.S. housing affordability is worse than the peak of the 2006 housing bubble

After a modest improvement in 2023, America’s housing affordability crisis is seemingly getting worse with each passing month.

Using data from the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank, macro strategist Charlie Bilello showed that the typical American household would need to spend 43.8% of their income to afford an average home in today’s market.

While it’s lower than the peak of 45.3% in 2022, it’s a notable rise from one year ago when average housing payments represented 40.4% of income.

For another comparison, housing payments as a percentage of average income peaked at 42% in 2006. This was during the housing bubble that preceded the 2008 financial crisis.

Before the pandemic, the typical household would need to spend roughly 30% of their income to afford a home.

 

See also  Your tax dollars at work: $100K on sunfish, $1M on quail, $750K on moon landing quote.
See also  Californians Reject “Soft on Crime” Bill in 70% Landslide, Demand Action on Safety and Homelessness

Views: 132

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.