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Michael Milken: How Housing Policy Hurts the Middle Class

by | Mar 7, 2014

(MICHAEL MILKEN, Wall Street Journal – March 5, 2014) The American dream traditionally meant that anyone could get ahead based on ability and hard work. But over the past few decades, the United States government created incentives through housing programs and the tax code that changed the dream for many Americans. Middle-class families began to think of homes as investments, not just shelter. When the housing market crashed, everyone suffered—homeowners, investors, wage-earners and taxpayers.Aggressive housing programs have not always helped the poor and middle class.
ED-AR922_milken_G_20140305175404(1)The median net worth of American adults is now one of the lowest among developed nations—less than $45,000, according to the Credit Suisse CSGN.VX -0.42% Global Wealth Databook. That compares with approximately $220,000 in Australia, $142,000 in France and $54,000 in Greece. Almost a third of American adults have a net worth of less than $10,000. Those statistics don’t convey the pain endured by millions of American families who lost their homes.
The American dream traditionally meant that anyone could get ahead based on ability and hard work. But over the past few decades, the United States government created incentives through housing programs and the tax code that changed the dream for many Americans. Middle-class families began to think of homes as investments, not just shelter. When the housing market crashed, everyone suffered—homeowners, investors, wage-earners and taxpayers.Aggressive housing programs have not always helped the poor and middle class.  (Read the rest of the story)

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