Want Affordable Housing? Build Homes, Cut Government

Listen to enough politicians and it won’t take long to hear about the lack of “affordable” healthcare, drugs, daycare, and housing. This was going on long before inflation returned after COVID. Everyone wants affordable things.

But the concept of affordability is made up of two components – the price of something and the income of the person who wants to possess it.

There are complicating factors in every market, so let’s focus on one – housing. Almost everyone thinks home prices and rents are just too damn high.

Many blame this on greedy landlords and investment firms buying up apartments and homes. President Biden (prior to his withdrawal from the presidential race) said he wants to impose a form of national rent control on “corporate” landlords.

There should be no doubt that a typical home today costs much more relative to income than it used to. The median price of an existing single-family home that sold in 2022 was about $390,000, which was 5.2 times higher than median household income of $74,580 that year (the most recent year for which median income is available).

By contrast, back in 1968, the median price of an existing single-family home was only 2.6 times median household income. As recently as 2011, the bottom of the housing bust, the ratio was only 3.3 and even at the peak of the housing boom in 2005, the ratio was 4.7. No wonder so many people are finding housing hard to afford.