Will My Children Be Able to Afford a Home?
Will My Children Be Able to Afford a Home?
The achievement of homeownership for many has been a cornerstone
of their financial stability. Many baby boomers have found
themselves property "rich" as property values have continued to
skyrocket in the last five years. Although very thankful for
their own good fortune, many baby boomers are now seriously
concerned about the prospects of their children ever being able
to afford to purchase a home. With the median sales price of a
California home exceeding $550,000, less than 14% of all
California households are able to qualify. The ability to
qualify is based on the buyer coming in with a 20% down-payment,
and using a 30 year fixed rate loan with current interest rates
at or slightly above 6%. If the incomes of the offspring of the
baby-boomer generation are analyzed separately, they are even
less likely to be able to qualify.
The California Association of Realtors and the National
Association of Realtors has identified Housing Affordability as
one of the critical issues facing the industry. Many cities
have, in response to calls for action, started working on
policies to help make housing more affordable. The Homeownership
Alliance, an alliance of varied industry trade association and
non-profit associations, has published a survey of different
programs across the country that have been acknowledged as
providing workable solutions to this problem. Ultimately, the
health of the real estate industry depends on the ability of
buyers to buy, providing those who wish to sell the means to do
so. The full report can be found at HomeownershipAlliance.com.
Baby boomers who want their children to enjoy the benefits of
homeownership can assist their offspring by teaching them what
it takes to own property. The sooner a parent is able to get
their child started on such an investment, the more likely the
success. There is hardly any better time than the present, if
the capacity is there. Today's real estate environment has
generated tremendous amounts of equity, and there is no one more
capable than us to assist "our" children in ensuring that they
will be able to afford a home. Our children will generally see
what we do successfully and will use that as an example of how
to live their lives. This mentoring generally occurs
subconsciously, and is even more powerful if conscious attention
is paid to it. As a method of instruction, a parent could assist
their adult child to purchase a property jointly with them, and
assist them in the management of the property. In time, as they
learn to handle the finances and management of the investment, a
parental decision can be made to partition the gains.
Eventually, the parent can help their children gain financial
independence by making that decision to partition the gains, or
by "gifting" them their (the parent's) interest as a reward for
the adult child's successful completion of the "mentoring"
program.
For more information on real estate futures visit
http://www.nefcortez.com