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The Financial Flipside Podcast


The Financial Flipside is, in part, a podcast for entrepreneurs, but it’s not only that. We also talk about the politics of money and the way that economic issues impact our daily lives. Our episodes cover everything from trade to tax reform, from cash flow to credit, from the history of money to the economics of immigration, all in a way that is frank, accessible, and (hopefully) fun.

Jul 9, 2019

As of May 2019, the average price of a new house in the US was $377,200, a price that will buy you, on average, an apartment’s worth of space for every member of your household. Alongside expanding house sizes and the proliferation of luxury condos is a stark reality: the United States, like many other places in the world, is in the throes of a housing crisis. While there is plenty of physical housing to be had, very little of it is affordable , especially when one takes into account that most people’s wages have remained relatively flat. For example, as of June 2019, there is not a single place in the US or Puerto Rico where a minimum wage job would allow a person to afford to rent a two-bedroom apartment. 

 

Despite what looks like a bleak housing picture, people, especially in the United States, remain invested in home ownership, even if staying in their homes means stretching their salaries or spending hours commuting each week. Why are Americans obsessed with home ownership?  Does the idea of one’s house as a source of wealth hold up? Is HGTV ruining the way we think about real estate? What are the ways out of our current mess? We take on these questions and more in this episode. 

 

How HGTV has changed the way we view real estate and our own homes: 1, 2

Millennial homeowners get real about how they were able to afford a home.

In which the Brookings Institution decides that everything is (mostly) fine as far as (middle-class) housing goes. 

Charting the rise of housing costs in the US

Views from the Six: Nearly 40% of Toronto’s homes aren’t occupied by the people who live in them, instead serving as rental properties, investments, or second homes. 

HUD explains the cost-burden index, or why we use 30% as a benchmark when budgeting for housing. 

Explaining the housing crisis. If visuals work better for you, here’s a breakdown in three handy graphics.

How zoning laws have come to define what makes a family 

What is gentrification, anyway? How is it different from a neighborhood revitalization plan? 

Speaking of gentrification, can it be slowed by the presence of historic landmarks?

What do we mean by the financialization of housing?

From Dissent Magazine: a three-part series on the past, present, and possible (de-financialized)  future of housing

Why many Americans are abandoning the dream of home ownership. 

Is Buying a House Overrated?

Give people houses (and adequate social support)! It worked in Finland.