nein51 said:Redbrickbear said:nein51 said:Redbrickbear said:nein51 said:Redbrickbear said:boognish_bear said:College students state they expect to make about $84,855 one year after graduation, according to a survey of college students by Real Estate Witch.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) August 14, 2024
The average starting salary for recent graduates is $56,000, per CNBC.
The scary thing is there are lots of markets out there now where you could not even buy a house and live on 84k
So not only will you not make that… it would not be enough anyway.
Some thing seems very wrong
Why does someone fresh out of college need or want to buy a house? I rented crappy apartments for years after I graduated.
Hopefully to start a family
(We need them)
My wife and I lived with our kid in an apartment for a few years. You can have a family in an apartment just fine.
You can...but most don't
There is a whole thread on X about how apartment living lowers family formation and child raising...
Basically if you want people getting married and having kids....they need to be in homes
[Research suggests that women who live in apartments have lower fertility rates than women who live in single-family houses. For example, a study found that women who live in studio, 1-, or 2-bedroom apartments have lower fertility rates than women who live in 1- or 2-bedroom single-family houses. Another study found that couples in apartments have a lower risk of first conception than family houses]
Causation vs correlation. Are they lower fertility because they live in an apartment or is that a matter of socioeconomic reality?
I will try and find the thread
But from what I remember if compared places with High income but apartment living (South Korea) with places in the USA that had lower income but more single homes (Alabama) and found higher fertility rates.
People don't seem to do well in apartments or higher density housing