With Housing, Millennials Have Much to Complain About

Since taking a big leap upward in the 1940s and 1950s, the homeownership rate in the US has been remarkably steady since the 1960s, with close to two-thirds of households owning their homes.

Yes, there was an increase during the 2000s housing boom and a decrease during the bust, but a different Census Bureau survey found that the homeownership rate in the second quarter of this year was, at 65.9%, about where it was in the late 1990s and late 1970s. Since the 1970s, inflation-adjusted house prices (measured using the FHFA House Price Index and the Consumer Price Index) have almost doubled, yet homeownership has not declined.

Homeownership Over the Long Haul

Look at homeownership rates by age from yet another Census Bureau survey, the Annual Social and Economic Supplement conducted every February through April as part of the monthly Current Population Survey from which the unemployment rate is derived, and you do see some movement. The homeownership rate is up since 1976 for Americans 65 and older, but down for younger adults.

Homeownership Rates By Age

It’s not down all that much, though. At 52.7% as of earlier this year, the rate for those aged 25 through 34 was about 10 percentage points below its late-1970s level and four points less than in the mid-2000s. But it’s close to where it was for most of the 1980s and 1990s, and all-in-all there’s not much here to stoke concern that today’s young adults — who are still mostly members of the giant millennial generation, which currently ranges in age from 26 to 42 — are missing out on homeownership and its attendant economic benefits relative to Gen Xers or even younger baby boomers. More than half of them own homes!