| > I agree that it's nice if you have assets Most people have nonfinancial assets (e.g., durable items of personal property.) > _This_ literally is the reason owning a home is next to impossible for millennials and gen-zs. No, its not, because its been true (and inflation higher) for preceding generations, so it can’t possible explain why Millenials and beyond have it worse than Gen X who had it worse than Boomers. Tax and spending policy shifts (Reagan's being the biggest single one nationally, but there have been several subsequent national ones, and CA Prop 13 and its — mostly much weaker — copycats play a role, too) are a much bigger factor > Typically this looks like the 2008 crash The 2008 crash wasn't a regularly occurring event. (And as bad as it was, wasn't nearly as bad in and of itself as it is widely perceived; it gets magnified because — again for reasons that trace directly back to fiscal policy choices — the expansion after the brief and shallow 2001 recession was, up to that point, pretty much the most hollow expansion in modern US history, with, IIRC, every income quintile but the top doing worse, and even the top being mostly flat except for the top couple percent.) |