Housing is one of those things where I think you shouldn't treat it like a financial investment. Practically it has been, but I think morally it shouldn't be.

Morally speaking, unlike most things it's actually a zero-sum game. If your house goes up in price, then that just increased the cost of living for the next person who buys it (and probably for you too if you intend to live somewhere after you sell it). It also increases rents -- Not because of the fallacious economic reasoning that says prices are a direct function of the cost to produce a thing, but because the landlords who aren't raising prices ultimately get run out of town by the ones who are.

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nostr:npub1m343wwwdmvare434daq4jpjyc4q4nv56pftgh03jej5l42azs44qwpnjzz nostr:npub1mh5a6mhm4u78glqxhltq7uexv6kddphycthlguvn0ux8ch72tc8q6q233h it's not a zero sum game at all. If your house goes up, it's probably because living space got rarer, so it sends the signal to people that they should move in with more people.

Of course in the real world, real estate is one of the most manipulated assets in the US so it's impossible to figure out what price things would have in an actual market.