You could maybe argue housing but even then it was normal for large multigenerational families
Yeah, and as I said in my other comment, we've got more single people and working single women now. If you adjust for that, it's possible - just possible, I haven't calculated or anything - that homeownership is down. 55% to 66% percent doesn't seem like a huge change given the huge changes to society. Some questions certainly remain.
Yeah, and as I said in my other comment, we've got more single people and working single women now. If you adjust for that, it's possible - just possible, I haven't calculated or anything - that homeownership is down. 55% to 66% percent doesn't seem like a huge change given the huge changes to society. Some questions certainly remain.
Women's homeownership is higher than men's, because of the amount of wealth they've stolen.
I'm shocked - shocked, I say! - that you'd make such a statement.
It's factually accurate.
Or -- OR -- in this case, women just outlived their spouses (on average), and older people/married couples are more likely to own a home.
(insert your own conspiracy theory as to why they outlived their spouses here)