Housing has shifted from being a place to live into an investment vehicle, with policies intentionally designed to prioritize asset appreciation for current homeowners. Because homeowners are a reliable voting bloc, political leaders often restrict supply and block development to keep prices rising, effectively pricing out younger generations. This is not a market failure but a deliberate political choice to satisfy the interests of older voters.
Why are housing prices in the United States increasingly unaffordable for younger generations?
Answered from 1 conversation · Updated July 2026
Sources — jump to the moment
From this episode
The Week: The Cost of Being Young in AmericaThe Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway
Related questions
- What is the concept of 'escape velocity' in the context of young people's financial behavior?
- Why is the Inkling model considered a mixture of experts rather than a dense model?
- What is the primary goal of the Inkling AI model released by Thinking Machines?
- What is the significance of the blue checkmark (Verified status) when following financial accounts on X?
Yedapo turns hours of podcasts and YouTube into two-minute answers.
Ask your own question →