• Tb0n3
    link
    English
    -19 months ago

    And? It’s near enough the same to be no different.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      19 months ago

      It’s completely different.

      Imagine you have 10 people. 1 has $100, 2 have $50, and 7 have $20. Now imagine you have 10 stores selling pants. 1 store has a few pants for $50, and a bunch for $10. 1 store has a few pants for $80 and a bunch for $25. 8 have pants for $30, $25, and $10.

      In this scenario, the median wealth is $20, and in all but one store the median price is $25. So in 90% of stores, the median pants cost more than the median amount a person can spend. BUT, all but one still have plenty of pants that cost less than the median. Given this, you wouldn’t say “90% of people can’t afford pants”.

      • Tb0n3
        link
        English
        -19 months ago

        You don’t take out a 30-year loan for pants.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          19 months ago

          You’re right. This is just an example to illustrate the statistics involved. At this point it doesn’t seem like you’re continuing this debate in good faith.

          • Tb0n3
            link
            English
            -19 months ago

            All I’m saying is it makes no sense. People keep buying houses which they couldn’t do if they were unaffordable. And it’s not just 1% that are using those houses. If those houses are bought by the 1% and rented to the 99% in order to pay the house off that means it is not unaffordable to the 99%.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              1
              edit-2
              9 months ago

              it is not unaffordable to the 99%

              You’re right, and that’s not what’s being claimed. It’s just saying that in 99% OF MARKETS, the median price exceeds the means of the median income. This isn’t really that surprising, actually. In a perfectly balanced market, you’d expect the median price to be exactly equal to the affordability of the median income, so about 50% of markets would be above this value, and 50% would be below it.

              It’s probably also true that a far greater percentage of markets are affordable if you look at median income vs 45th percentile home cost, or 55th percentile income vs median home cost.

              All this means is that if you make median income, you’ll probably need to buy a house that’s below median price.