How the housing crisis is fucking up the kids
7 hours ago
- #Generational Psychology
- #Housing Crisis
- #Financial Nihilism
- The U.S. housing crisis, with median home prices around $410,000, makes homeownership inaccessible for many young people, especially when combined with student loan debt.
- Generational pessimism is fueled by economic instability, including the 2008 housing crash and pandemic-era challenges, leading to widespread belief among Gen Z that they'll never afford a home.
- Scarcity mentality, as studied by Sendhil Mullainathan, causes cognitive narrowing, where planning for the future is replaced by optimizing for the present due to perceived hopelessness.
- Financial nihilism emerges as a rational response, manifesting in behaviors like doom spending, gambling on crypto, and opting out of traditional career paths.
- Status games shift from conventional markers like homeownership to areas like looksmaxxing, where effort visibly yields outcomes, unlike the housing market.
- Social media exacerbates feelings of falling behind through comparison spirals, creating positional precarity even among high earners.
- The broken American Dream script leads to an identity crisis, with individuals blaming themselves or rejecting societal expectations entirely.
- The psychological fallout from housing unaffordability rewires how young people view money, work, and the future, making financial planning seem irrelevant.
- Structural failures in housing are often misattributed to generational character flaws, delaying solutions to rebuild a functional system.