49 Years Of Income And Home Values

 | May 26, 2016 12:42AM ET

Often conversations about home buying end up in discussions on the high cost of homes today and their affordability – or lack thereof.

We decided to take a look at the long-term trends in home prices in comparison to income and found that incomes have been stagnant since the early 1970s, while home prices have risen dramatically in comparison.

In order to analyze income, we have used the Middle Quintile for households, which is the middle 20% of all households adjusted for inflation, with 2014 as our base year. The Census Bureau, our source for income data, began publishing annual reports for gross household incomes in 1967. For median home prices, our source is the American Household Survey, which published annual surveys from 1973 to1981 and bi-annually starting in 1983. For new home prices, we’ve used new residential sales data from the Census Bureau.

Let’s look at middle quintile income since 1967. Many economists and mainstream media correspondents often cite stunted income growth as a fundamental reason for economic sluggishness. Real (inflation adjusted) middle quintile income peaked in 2000 at $58,000. The real low for this data series was at the start of the series in 1967 at $44,000. The second lowest real income was in 1971 at $47,000. Remember – we're focusing on gross income before taxes.