@freemo speaking for the canadian market, while there is some merit to the suggestion that we simply buy more stuff along with our houses than we used to this accounts for very little of the increased cost in most areas. The vast amount of the increase is in the cost of land because increased demand for living space. For instance, a half acre plot of land near where I live is now going for around 275 000$ with no house on it at all. An identical plot right next door with a brand new bungalow on it back in the 90s would have been around 120 000$.
@Clementulus its not about "buying more stuff along with our houses".. it is about function/utility and wealth. Our houses are built with more wealth (utility to a function) than ever before. The technology, and the function it brings, in our insulation, themostats, AC, appliances, wood treatments, security systems, glass on our windows, etc is worth a huge amount.
The fact is a modern home provides things a 50s home would not even be possible.
@freemo but if most working class people cant afford a 0.25 acre plot to plop a house on and all the available supply is in use, rental or otherwise, it's not hard to see why most young people will laugh in your face when you tell them how much wealth is in a modern home, because they are literally sleeping in their car.
@Clementulus If you choose to live in an area with the sort of population and advancement from 70+ years ago you'd be in a highly undeveloped area. That would cost you 1,000$ on the low end in the USA. The land can be very affordable, again, if your willing to live like they did 70+ years ago.
@Clementulus By the way that 4K proce I stated was the **average** for the cheapest state, not the cheapest in that state.
@freemo but im not comparing to 70+ years ago, im comparing to less than 20 years ago where houses that were brand new then have more than doubled in price since then with very little done in terms of renovation. My point is that its not the materials in the dwelling that have driven increased cost of housing, which was your original post, but rather an increased demand for limited supply of land.
@Clementulus at only $1000 for a quarter acre in the cheapest state the point is moot. Minimal living is cheap and accessible.
The fact that people are building and selling more expensive homes than before only speaks to how well off many of us are to afford more.
@Clementulus We arent talking a self-sufficient lifestype. Or deep forrest living. The price for land I gave wa the average, not the cheapest deep woods price.