The number of 25-34 year olds living with parents has doubled from 10% to 20% since 2000. This represents a significant "housing deficit" of unformed households, which will drive strong demand for new housing as soon as affordability improves.

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Meaningful affordability cannot be achieved with superficial fixes. It requires long-term, structural solutions: building 5-10 million more homes to address housing costs (40% of CPI), implementing universal healthcare to lower medical expenses, expanding public higher education, and aggressive antitrust enforcement to foster competition.

When the economic system, particularly the housing market, makes it impossible for the youth to get ahead, it guarantees the rise of populism. Desperation leads them to vote for any promise of change, however destructive, such as socialist policies that ultimately collapse the economy.

Homeownership is the primary vehicle for intergenerational wealth creation in the United States. The average household has four times more wealth tied up in their home than in stock market investments, highlighting the severe economic impact of declining ownership rates.

Despite the current affordability crisis, underlying demographic trends from young millennials and Gen Z create a massive, long-term structural demand for housing. This will require approximately 18 million new units through 2030, irrespective of short-term market cycles.

Whether one owns a home is a primary determinant of their perception of affordability. Homeowners with fixed mortgages feel more secure due to locked-in housing costs and accumulated equity. Renters, however, face constant rent increases and lack this wealth-building asset, making them feel far more financially insecure.

The significant drop-off in population size with Gen Z and Gen Alpha will lead to a sharp decline in household formation. This demographic shift is projected to cause a 25% peak-to-trough reduction in single-family home building by the early-to-mid 2030s.

The affordability crisis isn't solely about price inflation; it's also driven by "cultural inflation." The expected size of a starter home has ballooned from under 1,000 sq ft in the 1950s to nearly 2,500 sq ft today. This dramatic shift in consumer expectations fundamentally alters the affordability calculation.

The American housing market is increasingly inaccessible to younger generations. The median age of a homebuyer has hit a record high of 59, the same age one can access retirement funds. Even the median first-time buyer is now 40, indicating a systemic affordability crisis.

The current housing market is not a cyclical bubble that will pop, but a structural crisis. It's a permanent collapse of opportunity driven by policy failures, corporate consolidation, and demographic incentives that have created deep, lasting scarcity, fundamentally changing the nature of homeownership in America.

While local policies like zoning are often blamed for housing crises, the problem's prevalence across vastly different economies and regulatory environments suggests it's a global phenomenon. This points to systemic drivers beyond local supply constraints, such as global capital flows into real estate.