I’m confused at the fact that all of us outdoors people feel the need to be confined to a big city to earn a higher income to live in a more expensive house. I’d much rather own a house that costs less in a more rural area, less crime, enjoy no traffic jams Know my neighbors/community, let kids know there classmates, have accountability for your actions and just enjoy simple life. Not a lazy non motivated person by any means of the word. Actually own and operate my own business and seem to always have to be working the way it is. Not in the market for a move. Not trying to capitalize on fluctuating markets. My common sense tells me I shouldn’t be buying a house for $800k. Living within my means.
Yeah but that's not really an option for most people. The businesses that can survive without relying on interstate and global trade and ancillary services are slim to none. Builder? Where do your materials come from, who owns and works at the train yard, who drives your materials to the depot, who works at the power plant so you have electric and gas, etc. My wife doesn't have a job if there's not a level 1 trauma center in town, which limits our options, and as much as I'd like to retire from crunching numbers to a nice farm the buy-in is steep, and everybody knows that behind every comfortable farmer is a wife with a job in town.
I'm not saying go to Costa Rica and have try ayhuasca, but it benefits us all to remember that we're always interconnected, man. My great grandad was a country doctor, he sure as knew that his little piece of the foothills of GA was connected to Atlanta. Even the old west, little towns lived and died by the mail. Still the case, when I worked in an peds ER here we saw a fair number of flipped ATVs, ODs, and gunshot wounds from the farm towns, enough that we had an in-house air evac team, the difference between a kid who'd survive to have a story about the follies of youth and a grieving parent.
Just some food for thought. The burger flipper in downtown Chicago gas more in common with the farmhand ten miles outside Red Bud than with the investment banker up the street.
I guess that's off topic. I will say that the craze for investment real estate is driving the bubble. HGTV and the like had everybody thinking they could house-flip their way into the yacht club, now it's everybody thinking they're gonna be a landlord and live like a king. I suspect, give it a year and there will be a moderate correction as a bunch of people realize that rental real estate isn't a passive investment. Maybe 3 years for a full correction; judging by some of the places I rented as a younger man it takes awhile for people to realize that you do in fact have to do repairs and maintenance. Give time for rates to increase a bit as well. If Congress ever gets off their butts and passes this infrastructure bill that'll flub my timeline. It'll mean a lot of good jobs and opportunities for people to build new businesses.