Anonymous wrote:I don’t know where those fictional people live where $612 includes taxes and insurance but it isn’t around here. I also don’t understand why it’s so difficult to process why people living on a fixed income with a paid off mortgage don’t want to leave their homes that they spent years paying for and enjoying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop your whining and get a therapist to help you deal with your very transparent issues with your parents.
NP. My parents aren’t Boomers but I legitimately don’t see how people don’t understand why Millrennials/Gen Z/Gen Alpha feel enraged that no matter how hard they work they will never have the ability to build wealth the way previous generations did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. My parents aren’t Boomers but I legitimately don’t see how people don’t understand why Millrennials/Gen Z/Gen Alpha feel enraged that no matter how hard they work they will never have the ability to build wealth the way previous generations did.
Every generation has something to be upset with the prior ones about, but also things to appreciate about them, no? Also, each generation has it's own unique challenges and makes it's own mistakes. Millennials are not Boomers, Gen X, Gen Z, or Gen Alpha. And in the years prior to the pandemic, most headlines on this topic noted that many Millennials didn't want Boomers' (outdated and nonurban) real estate:
Millennials don't want to buy baby boomers' sprawling, multi-bedroom homes, and it's creating a major problem in the real-estate market. Boomers are looking to downsize, but millennials aren't interested in their huge houses.
https://www.businessinsider.com/millennials-vs-baby-boomers-big-houses-real-estate-market-problems-2019-3?op=1
Boomers, Millennials, and the McMansions No One Wants
https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/boomers-millennials-and-the-mcmansions-no-one-wants/
Millennials don’t want the homes their parents worked hard to buy
https://genhq.com/millennials-dont-want-buy-baby-boomers-homes/
Millennials are making 3 key decisions that are wiping out the starter home — and it's changing what homeownership in America looks like
-The typical millennial is renting longer and buying later, surpassing the need for a starter home.
-A delay in homeownership gives millennials more time to build wealth, meaning that for some their first home is a million-dollar luxury home.
-Some rich urban millennials prefer to rent in the city and buy a vacation home instead of a primary residence.
https://www.businessinsider.com/personal-finance/millennials-wiping-out-starter-homes-real-estate-2019-4?op=1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop your whining and get a therapist to help you deal with your very transparent issues with your parents.
NP. My parents aren’t Boomers but I legitimately don’t see how people don’t understand why Millrennials/Gen Z/Gen Alpha feel enraged that no matter how hard they work they will never have the ability to build wealth the way previous generations did.
Anonymous wrote:NP. My parents aren’t Boomers but I legitimately don’t see how people don’t understand why Millrennials/Gen Z/Gen Alpha feel enraged that no matter how hard they work they will never have the ability to build wealth the way previous generations did.
Anonymous wrote:Stop your whining and get a therapist to help you deal with your very transparent issues with your parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it was economically feasible for them to downsize, more would have been doing it. They face the same constraints the rest of us do if they try to downsize. Limited availability of small houses, hassle of selling / buying, and the price difference between their large “as is” sale and a small dwelling in same area doesn’t make financial sense for them. It’s the lack of housing options that keeps them in place.
Oh they have options….they just don’t want to pay for it. Don’t want to pay capital gains on home sale. Don’t want to pay more for less square footage, despite being newly renovated or in a better location.
Boomers want Big.
Anonymous wrote:If it was economically feasible for them to downsize, more would have been doing it. They face the same constraints the rest of us do if they try to downsize. Limited availability of small houses, hassle of selling / buying, and the price difference between their large “as is” sale and a small dwelling in same area doesn’t make financial sense for them. It’s the lack of housing options that keeps them in place.