Making the Dream Real: Why the Housing Conversation Needs Young Voices
The recent Harvard Gazette podcast, “Priced Out of the American Dream,” offered a sobering look at the housing crisis through the lens of some of the nation’s top economic minds. Harvard economists Edward Glaeser and Jason Furman, alongside Ivory Innovations’ Amy Tomasso, rightly identified the structural barriers to homeownership: restrictive zoning, NIMBYism, and a severe supply shortage. They correctly noted that the current system benefits “insiders” at the expense of “outsiders”.
The American Dream Isn't Dead, It's Just More Expensive.
If you have been scrolling through social media lately, you have undoubtedly seen the viral posts and trending videos declaring a singular, pessimistic message: "The American Dream is dead." It is an easy narrative to believe, especially when the math genuinely does not add up the way it did for previous generations.
For Young Americans, Debt Free Isn't The Goal. Wealth Is.
A recent USA Today article declared that for Gen Z, the American Dream has shifted. That Young Americans have traded the aspiration of upward mobility for the more modest goal of simply achieving stability. The piece reflects a growing media narrative: that Gen Z, crushed by student loans, rising housing costs, and stagnant wages, has quietly surrendered the pursuit of wealth and settled for survival.