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	<title>Comments on: Paul Krugman: Gone Baby Gone</title>
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		<title>By: Evolver</title>
		<link>https://bartblog.bartcop.com/?p=1141&#038;cpage=1#comment-6073</link>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Evolver]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Oct 2007 01:18:15 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Hell, I knew it was a bubble a good three/four years ago. I was living in Massachusetts, owing $100k on our house, which for various reasons we could scarcely afford. $1100 mortgage payment, oil heat, etc. The principal had only gone down about $15k in ten years. But prices had appreciated to the point where I could sell and move away with $100k in pocket, go somewhere more affordable. I was in a hurry because it was obvious to me that most Americans now cannot REALLY afford to pay a fifth of a million for a house, which is now considered CHEAP! It&#039;s like we&#039;re down the rabbit hole. Anyway, I finally got a transfer to North Carolina and did indeed clear $100k, barely enough to get into a decent house here. Difference is, unlike so many people who listened to Greenspan, we&#039;re no longer in imminent danger of foreclosure.

I frankly can&#039;t understand how so many people could believe this guy when he said things that logically could not possibly be true. Average wages have been stagnant for more than a decade, yet housing has doubled in price, and somehow is still affordable? Sure, if you get an interest-only loan (i.e. &#039;rent from the bank&#039;) and work 80 hours a week. You can do that till you&#039;re in your seventies, can&#039;t you?

One of the big reasons housing prices go up so is that your dollar is competing with the dollars of the overrich who don&#039;t pay their share of taxes any more.]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hell, I knew it was a bubble a good three/four years ago. I was living in Massachusetts, owing $100k on our house, which for various reasons we could scarcely afford. $1100 mortgage payment, oil heat, etc. The principal had only gone down about $15k in ten years. But prices had appreciated to the point where I could sell and move away with $100k in pocket, go somewhere more affordable. I was in a hurry because it was obvious to me that most Americans now cannot REALLY afford to pay a fifth of a million for a house, which is now considered CHEAP! It&#8217;s like we&#8217;re down the rabbit hole. Anyway, I finally got a transfer to North Carolina and did indeed clear $100k, barely enough to get into a decent house here. Difference is, unlike so many people who listened to Greenspan, we&#8217;re no longer in imminent danger of foreclosure.</p>
<p>I frankly can&#8217;t understand how so many people could believe this guy when he said things that logically could not possibly be true. Average wages have been stagnant for more than a decade, yet housing has doubled in price, and somehow is still affordable? Sure, if you get an interest-only loan (i.e. &#8216;rent from the bank&#8217;) and work 80 hours a week. You can do that till you&#8217;re in your seventies, can&#8217;t you?</p>
<p>One of the big reasons housing prices go up so is that your dollar is competing with the dollars of the overrich who don&#8217;t pay their share of taxes any more.</p>
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