A recent study by the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard
University addressed this question. Their paper, Reexamining the Social Benefits of
Homeownership after the Housing Crisis, revealed some interesting
findings:
Homeownership Still Preferred
Over Renting
“Even after the dramatic loss of equity and the high foreclosure rates,
the early evidence suggests that people seem to believe that, over the long
run, owning is still preferable to renting…The long term cultural preference
for owning seems to have weathered the recent housing crisis.”
Americans Still Expect to be
Homeowners
“The research on home-buying expectations supports the conclusion that
very large percentages of Americans still expect to buy a home at some time in
the future.”
Younger Americans More Desirous
of Homeownership
“Moreover, the finding that younger renters and owners are more likely
than their older counterparts to expect to own bodes well for the future of the
housing market.”
Even after one of the most difficult decades in this country’s real
estate history, the belief that homeownership is a part of the American Dream
still lives on.
Courtesy: The KCM Blog
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