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David Stanley Ford

Some believe that owning a home doesn’t build wealth
Real Estate Watch

AMY HOAK    Comments Comment on this article1
Published: July 4, 2009

CHICAGO — Nearly half of American adults who participated in a recent survey said they no longer believe that home ownership is a realistic way to build wealth, the National Foundation for Credit Counseling reported recently.

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The findings, from a survey of about 1,000 people, run counter to the long-held perception that a home should be part of a person’s financial strategy, the NFCC said.

"It had been considered the cornerstone of wealth building,” said Gail Cunningham, spokeswoman for the NFCC. Homeownership had been a significant tool that most people felt was necessary to prepare for retirement, she said in a phone interview.

The survey was conducted because the organization was curious about future implications of living through the mortgage meltdown, she said. Whether consumers reflect on their own experience or are just "observing the guy in the cubicle next door,” conditions have caused many people to change their attitudes about housing, she said.

For now, anyway.

According to an annual survey from the NFCC released earlier this year, 57 percent of adults reported that they were spending less than they were a year ago, Cunningham said. But 45 percent of those who were spending less said that if their financial situation improved, they would resume their spending habits.

The results showed that nearly one-third of those polled didn’t think they would ever be able to afford to buy a home. Forty-two percent of people who have purchased a home — but no longer own it — don’t think they’ll ever be able to afford to buy another. And 31 percent of those who still own a home don’t think they’ll ever be able to buy another — whether it’s to upgrade their existing home or buy a vacation home.

According to the survey, 74 percent of those who have never purchased a home said they could benefit from first-time home buyer education.

"The good news from the survey is that people now seem to grasp that buying a home is a complicated process and admit that they would benefit from education in advance of signing on the dotted line,” Cunningham said in a news release.

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

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David Stanley Ford





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Let's see. You can rent for your whole life and have nothing to show after paying enough for several houses or you can buy a house and own it. Renting is for folks that are not planning on staying long enough to get a return on the investment. The problem is houses were (and still are) going for more than they are actually worth. My estimate is 40-50% overpriced, down from 200% back in 2006.
Doug, Midwest City - Jul 4, 2009 at 10:22 am
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