Submitted:
01 July 2026
Posted:
02 July 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Sources of Information and Selection Criteria
2.3. Analytical Procedure
2.4. Reliability and Validity
3. Results
3.1. Historical Developments in Real Estate and Housing Policy
3.2. Economic Factors Determining the Generation Gap
Price-to-Income Ratio
Wage Stagnation
Student Debt Load
3.3. Social and Demographic Factors
3.4. Regulatory Frameworks and Public Policies
3.5. Impact of Technology on Housing Access for Young Generations
3.6. Comparative Synthesis: Housing Affordability Indicators by Generational Cohort
4. Discussion
4.1. Theoretical Implications for Housing Economics and Intergenerational Welfare Theory
4.2. Practical and Public Policy Implications
4.3. Comparison with Existing Literature
4.4. Limitations of the Study
5. Conclusions
5.1. Recommendations
- Push for zoning deregulation reforms that enable mixed residential densities in high-demand metropolitan areas, evaluating models implemented in New Zealand, Oregon, and California.
- Design down payment assistance programs focused on first-time buyers from the 1981–2012 cohorts, articulated with long-term ability to pay assessments.
- Explore rent-to-own schemes and subsidized co-ownership models as intermediate pathways to full ownership, particularly in contexts of highly valued markets.
- Develop mortgage products specifically designed for buyer profiles with high payment capacity but low initial capital, including down payment financing schemes linked to public or private participation.
- Implement pre-acquisition financial education programs that address total costs of ownership: insurance, property taxes, and preventative maintenance.
- Develop longitudinal research on the impact of zoning reforms on housing affordability and ownership rates of young generations.
- To deepen the comparative analysis between North American, European and Latin American contexts, identifying the contextual factors that determine the transferability of successful housing policies.
5.2. Future Lines of Research
References
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| Generational cohort | Year of birth | Economic context at the time of first acquisition | Average 30th Fixed Mortgage Rate (%) | Median price-to-income ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baby Boomers | 1946–1964 | Post-war: full employment, expansion of federal credit (FHA/VA), abundant land supply, and rapid urbanization | 5,0 – 10,0 | 3,5 – 4,5 |
| Generation X | 1965–1980 | Post-inflationary stabilization, technological boom, moderately flexible credit access; First signs of rising prices in the metropolitan area | 6,5 – 9,5 | 4,5 – 6,5 |
| Millennials | 1981–1996 | Post-Great Recession: Tightening credit standards, sustained rising prices, high youth unemployment and high student debt burden | 3,0 – 7,5 | 6,5 – 9,0 |
| Generation Z | 1997–2012 | COVID-19 pandemic, inflation 2022–2023, interest rates on a sustained rise and contraction of the available housing supply | 5,5 – 8,0 | 8,5 – 10,5+ |
| Country | Baby Boomers (~1975) | Generation X (~1995) | Millennials (~2015–2020) | Cumulative change (pp) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | ~52% | ~45% | ~34% | −18 pp (sustained decline) |
| United Kingdom | ~55% | ~46% | ~25% | −30 pp (largest OECD contraction) |
| Australia | ~60% | ~52% | ~36% | −24 pp (intense coastal pressure) |
| Spain | ~65% | ~54% | ~29% | −36 pp (2008 crisis impact) |
| Germany | ~38% | ~30% | ~20% | −18 pp (structural rental market) |
| OECD Average | ~52% | ~44% | ~30% | −22 pp (structural trend) |
| Indicator | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010–2020 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average 30th Fixed Mortgage Rate (%) | 5,5–6,5 | 8,5–10,5 | 10,0–16,0 | 7,0–9,5 | 5,5–8,5 | 3,5–5,0 |
| Real house price growth (%/year) | 1,5 | 2,8 | 1,2 | 2,1 | 4,8 | 4,2 |
| Real growth median wage (%/year) | 2,9 | 1,5 | 0,8 | 1,2 | 0,6 | 0,5 |
| Median price-to-income ratio | 3,2 | 3,8 | 4,0 | 4,8 | 6,1–7,5 | 7,5–8,5 |
| Down Payment Savings Time (Years)* | 2–3 | 3–4 | 4–6 | 5–7 | 8–11 | 12–15+ |
| Average Student Debt at Graduation (USD) | < 1,000 | < 3,000 | 8.000 | 18.000 | 27.000 | 37.000+ |
| Indicator | Baby Boomers (~1960–1980) | Generation X (~1980–2000) | Millennials / Gen Z (~2000–2022) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median price-to-income ratio | 3,5 – 5,0 | 5,0 – 7,0 | 7,5 – 9,5 |
| Ownership rate at age 30 | ~40% | ~35% | ~27% |
| Affordable housing markets (%) | >97% (year 1969) | ~75–80% | ~41% (2018–2022) |
| Average Student Debt (USD) | < 5,000 | 15.000 – 25.000 | > 37,000 |
| Estimated Down Payment Savings Time | 3 – 5 years | 7 – 10 years | 12 – 15 years or older |
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