Right. I was born in Europe and am still struggling with North American cultural assumption that "place to live" == "own property".
Back to the original post I think there are several statistics that apply to different geographical areas or demographics in the same post, leading us to conclusion that half the continent is out on the street, and demonstrating risk of back of the napkin calculations on policy decisions, even if we assume good will and honest effort :-/
You have to understand unlike in Europe. We have no safety net. Most peoples whole savings is their home. So owning your home is a big part of having something to retire on and pay bills.
Actually, very common in some European countries as well.
In the Netherlands, you aren’t taxed on your primary residence, but all other wealth has an approximately 2% annual wealth tax. This makes it challenging to accumulate wealth through any means other than a primary residence, which was many of my coworkers’ primary way of saving.
Granted, they also have mandatory pensions, which can give you a good income in retirement, but that’s different than wealth accumulation
Oh I've lived in Canada for 25 years now and I see that around me... It just isn't something I've embraced though. There's a almost religious faith that houses can only go up, and I've lived through enough interesting times and places not to believe it for a moment (as has anybody over 60 on Canada as well).
Bullshit. American unemployment pays consdeirably more than UK unemployment. Throw on food stamps and housing assisitance on there, and the US might still be below the more generous European countries, but you definitely have a safety net.
> unlike in Europe... So owning your home is a big part of having something to retire on and pay bills
So what, like the UK? And Ireland? And argaubly all of Europe east of Germany and in Scandinaivia, all places where home ownership is comparable or greater than the US?
Unemployment is different in every state and is pretty short. I know in NJ its only for 26 weeks. Plus this isn't used for retirement. Have you ever tried getting food stamps or housing. Lets just say its not very easy. Also its setup so that as soon as you start getting a little ahead its taken away. So you end up right back where you started.
Back to the original post I think there are several statistics that apply to different geographical areas or demographics in the same post, leading us to conclusion that half the continent is out on the street, and demonstrating risk of back of the napkin calculations on policy decisions, even if we assume good will and honest effort :-/