ON THE PLUS SIDE a guy could bust his A$$ and get a raise in pay so he could make the $20 grand down payment.
Not as easy as you think it is. Take the following example:
- We'll give them a 50% increase in pay and earning $15 an hour ($30K annually gross)
- optimistically lose $5,000 to taxes (leaving $25,000)
- $900 for rent (if you're lucky) ($10,800 annually)
- $75 a week for food ($3,900 annually)
- no car so they need bus pass to get to work ($1,000 annually)
- medical and dental (because they have no health coverage at that salary) ($1,000 annually)
- $5,000 for misc like gifts, incidentals, social life, phone, internet, television
- If they needed a vehicle to get to work then add $500 month for car payment, insurance, gas and maintenance
Bus worker has $3,300 extra at the end of the year and vehicle worker would be in the hole by $1,700.
IF there is no inflation it would take the bus worker 7 years to get the $20K down payment and the person who needs a vehicle would never be able to get the down payment.
In those 7 years the house they were looking at buying has risen by at least 40% (conservatively considering the way housing prices have risen over the last 15 years) so now the $200K is selling for $280K and the down payment required is $28K. They may have received increase in their wage but in today's economy you're lucky to get 1 or 2% meaning a pay increase of 15 or 30 cents an hour ($300-600 annually).
So the house is going up by at least 5 or 6% annually and their salary is increasing by 1 or 2%......the math isn't hard, they're falling further and further behind every year AND we haven't taken into consideration any inflation which completely negates their salary increase.
Life is so easy when you're a senior and own your home and have a lot of money in the bank but try looking at the situation many of the young people find themselves and it will truly shock you. There are many hard working young people that simply can't get ahead and yet it seems that many of our seniors don't care......quite sad actually.
Again, please try to explain to me how you support a program that gives $6,000 each year to people that make $71,000 annually?