The costs of treating diseases prevalent in old age often results in the loss of the home after they pass. This is because after a certain age if you get down to socialized healthcare, your home and assets are used to pay it back. State takes it.
Even if it's private, either the insurance or the clinic will take it eventually.
Widespread Medicaid estate planning would require boomers to confront their own mortality, so that's unlikely. Really it's going to be more like a lottery of those who are "lucky" enough to have their parents die without using long term care, reverse mortgages, squabbling siblings, etc. Most of those lifetimes of accumulation are just headed to the bankers' grindstone, as per the Faustian bargain that created all that on-paper "wealth" in the 80's and 90's.
The houses themselves will for the most part exist - flippers have become adept at putting new builder-grade beige lipstick on the pigs. But they will most likely be corporate rentals, and businesses have become quite proficient at deniable price fixing through the use of software. So even if there is an ultimate lack of demand, I don't expect that the move the needle much.
https://archive.ph/qTMty
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn_Devouring_His_Son
And Facebook has the answer: "It's just like the flu"
Not a surprise that it's most prevalent in the rust belt.
in ten years there will be so many extra houses...
The costs of treating diseases prevalent in old age often results in the loss of the home after they pass. This is because after a certain age if you get down to socialized healthcare, your home and assets are used to pay it back. State takes it.
Even if it's private, either the insurance or the clinic will take it eventually.
Special trusts like this [1] can save ones' assets.
[1] https://www.sjslawpc.com/practice-areas/what-is-a-medicaid-a...
Widespread Medicaid estate planning would require boomers to confront their own mortality, so that's unlikely. Really it's going to be more like a lottery of those who are "lucky" enough to have their parents die without using long term care, reverse mortgages, squabbling siblings, etc. Most of those lifetimes of accumulation are just headed to the bankers' grindstone, as per the Faustian bargain that created all that on-paper "wealth" in the 80's and 90's.
The houses themselves will for the most part exist - flippers have become adept at putting new builder-grade beige lipstick on the pigs. But they will most likely be corporate rentals, and businesses have become quite proficient at deniable price fixing through the use of software. So even if there is an ultimate lack of demand, I don't expect that the move the needle much.
Build houses not clouds
The game is rigged
Sighs in Gen X
We will be known as the invisible generation soon enough.