Retirement investing...

It's true the price of homes has risen - even when adjusted for inflation.
But the price per square foot has not risen nearly as much. Today's home size standards are higher than in the 80's.
Bottom graph shows here.
https://www.supermoney.com/inflation-adjusted-home-prices
Supply and demand of those tiny homes is also a thing, AND you have to consider the price per ft goes up as the house gets smaller. You cannot compare a 2500sf house to a 800sf house in the 80's and compare the cost per SF. That's flawed methodology. The average first time home buyer today is about 1.5x older than in the 1980's.
 
Supply and demand of those tiny homes is also a thing, AND you have to consider the price per ft goes up as the house gets smaller. You cannot compare a 2500sf house to a 800sf house in the 80's and compare the cost per SF. That's flawed methodology. The average first time home buyer today is about 1.5x older than in the 1980's.
800 sf? Where did you come up with that? You're only off by about 1,000 square feet.
And that's also how much bigger today's average home is than an average 80s home.
https://www.newser.com/story/225645/average-size-of-us-homes-decade-by-decade.html
 
I think people have changed the last 10-15 years+

Way rougher? No way.
Given what I see, the only generation that you'll ever convince me was "built different " is the Greatest, and we are sadly almost out of those. The Silent generation gets a huge honorable mention. Beyond that? Theyre just people.
 
Given what I see, the only generation that you'll ever convince me was "built different " is the Greatest, and we are sadly almost out of those. The Silent generation gets a huge honorable mention. Beyond that? Theyre just people.
People really have changed. But I suppose there is no real measurement for entitlement attitudes
 
People really have changed. But I suppose there is no real measurement for entitlement attitudes
It used to be the older generation complained how much "rougher" they had it.
"I had to walk to school in a snowstorm, uphill both ways."
Now it's the younger generation complaining - that's one change.
 
You are are zeroing in on one hardship that you encountered. I had a similar interest rate on my first house in '87 but I had more opportunities to get ahead than young adults today. The whole deck is stacked against them, not just one card.
"One hardship"? Do you have any recollection what the job market was like in much of the 80's?

The early 80's were a level mess.
 
So, I have been plotting a retirement. If everything is paid off, and you have say, $500k in mutual funds etc, is there any reason not to put it in a fund like PRT or EFC or something and just live off the dividends?
Yeah there is a reason not to put it into something like PRT.
The reason is that PRT, and to a lesser extent EFC, look to me to be dividend traps. NAV depletion is much??

IMO, they are terrible investments that attract with high yields. I guess with $500,000 if your goal is to have annual income and you don't plan on living more than a decade and leaving any sort of legacy then you'll be fine.

Chalk mine up there with the sort of financial advice you get on a tribology forum:)
 
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