Yes, I do, but I count myself among the lucky that I have been able to find a few extra bucks to tuck away. It's kind of discouraging to see the challenges facing young families today when it comes to finding those few extra bucks with living expenses going the way they are. The gap between the "haves" and "have-nots" is growing steadily, and the ration between the two groups is more than ever slanted in favour of a very, very few at the top of the pecking order.
I own a tired old shack that was ready for the wrecking ball years ago, but it sits on a large lot. I have sold to a developer who will take possession in the spring with the intent of knocking it down and building some sort of multi-unit money maker. He'll do fine, housing supply is low here and it's a sellers market. I did okay, I'll get out of here with enough for a modest condo and a healthy chunk in the bank that will give me a comfortable retirement income. I won't be hopping on jets and buying Tommy Bahama shirts all the time, but I'll be fine. What I'm watching now is people trying to get into the market with prices always hovering just out of reach. "The Market" makes it very, very hard for these people. I kept a renter in an extra room while I was commuting to camp in Alberta so the house wouldn't sit empty while I was gone. I was pretty generous with the rent I cahrged as I saw some value in the added security of having the house steadily occupied. She's been casting about looking for a place to move to in the new year, and it's been an eye-opener for both of us, she'll be going from "artificially low" rent to what might be best described as "rapacious". The rental market here for one bedroom apartments takes about $1200/month to get out of the "junk" range, and the going rate for anything livable is $1400/month and up. If you can find one. Our current vacancy rate is less than 1%.
The idea that "the market is us" tends to say we're a greedy bunch. Most of the places she is looking at are corporate owned, outfits like Broadstreet Properties who have a large inventory of local units, call themselves "community minded" and charge rents that need a $60K/year income to support.