Why should they have to leave their homes? It isn't on them to provide for "young families" and according to the article they own a quarter of large homes.... that leaves the majority of said market out of their hands.
No one is saying they have to leave their house. Don’t be hyperbolic and reductionist. What’s being said is that once again, the leg up which greatly benefited boomers does not exist for millennials.
> As a result, empty-nest Baby Boomers own 28% of large homes — and Milliennials with kids own just 14%, according to a Redfin analysis released Tuesday. Gen Z families own just 0.3% of homes with three bedrooms or more.
So, does GenX have the other 58%? I have doubts about that. Why don't they tell us where GenX stands and where the rest of the houses are? How many houses are corporate owned? They mention GenX a few paragraphs down, but only in the context of 2012, when they owned 19%.
Ignore the blame-the-Boomers angle. Over the past half-century or so, the ratio of Americans to square feet of residential housing has been falling relentlessly, while the cost per square foot of residential housing has been rising relentlessly. No matter how you try to slice that pie, there's gonna be a grim shortage of housing for the 99%.
In that same time the US population has essentially doubled, and while I know how much people like to talk about it, this is what happens when populations explode over short time frames... limited resources become more scarce and more expensive.
Putting aside Malthusian arguments about how many people the world can theoretically support, when it comes to lifestyle the results are clear. It isn't a perfect analogy, but Neal Stephenson got to the heart of it a long time ago:
"...once the Invisible Hand has taken away all those historical inequities and smeared them out into a broad global layer of what a Pakistani brickmaker would consider to be prosperity..."
Well that's the trend. A world bloated with people, supported by burning non-renewable resources from energy to agriculture, and which is now connected such that everyone wants access to the top lifestyle... it doesn't work. The obvious reality is that you can't convince people to settle for a worse life, so you need to work on reducing the population.
And yet the story of the age is that falling birth rates are going to doom everywhere from Japan to China, the US to Europe.
> this is what happens when populations explode over short time frames... limited resources become more scarce and more expensive.
New Zealand (similar population and size to Oregon) has an immigrant population[1] of ~1/3 and we are a poorer nation BUT houses are available here - despite our population growth significantly exceeding the USA.
If houses are not available in say Oregon, it isn't due to "population explosion" there. And it isn't due to lack of land or population density (NZ is similar to Oregon for both).
People to need to understand that human nature and incentives are easy to talk about changing, and nearly impossible to change. It's why we're slow-walking towards catastrophic climate change.
> We could have easily built the housing we need...
If mom, dad, and 4 kids were content to share a 1k square foot "starter" house in 1970, but now all 6 of 'em (parents are divorced) want their own 2.5k square foot McMansion - that's a 15X increase in housing stock requirements. Admitting that the overall demand-side numbers aren't that bad..."no zoning" would still not be anything like a cure for the problem.
This reeks of populist nonsense from CNN.