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- [Narrator] This chart shows median net worth
by generation in the US
and it's what many people think of
when they refer to boomers as the wealthiest generation,
but that's only part of the story.
As a whole, they hold about half of US wealth,
much of it in real estate,
but that's mostly these boomers born between 1946 and 1954.
The younger boomers, on the other hand,
are increasingly struggling with homelessness.
Here's how boomers are exacerbating the housing shortage
and overwhelming local economies
as a record number of them age.
Around 80% of older boomers,
who are now mostly in their 70s, are homeowners.
- These are folks who are able to buy homes
when they were younger.
A lot of them have paid off their mortgages
and their homes have appreciated a lot
over the last few decades.
- [Narrator] Boomers own over 35%
of all large homes in the US.
Most of those homes belong to households
with no children living with them.
What's happening is that these older Americans
are increasingly choosing to age in place.
- They feel a connection to the community.
Financially, they might feel kind of stuck with their home.
You know, I already own this free and clear.
If I wanted to buy another home,
that new home is gonna cost a lot more.
- [Narrator] This trend of older homeowners
hanging onto their houses
is exacerbating the housing shortage
and contributing to rising home prices.
- It's especially acute of a problem right now
because millennials are at kind of a prime home buying
time in their lives,
and the millennial generation is a very large generation.
- [Narrator] California homeowners
typically stay put the longest.
- California has a very unique tax structure
where you're very much incentivized to stay where you are
because as long as you stay in your home,
your property taxes won't go up.
- [Narrator] Not all boomers
are holding onto their large homes.
Around 20% are selling,
but one reason this might not be making
as big of an impact on the housing shortage
is that boomers aren't really downsizing
with their new home,
so they're not increasing the supply
of large homes on the market.
- That could be driven by there not being a lot of good,
what we call starter home, or kinda smaller home options,
because in general, when builders are building,
they tend to be building larger and more expensive homes.
- [Narrator] At the same time,
younger boomers are driving up the number
of older homeless people in cities across the country.
- Elderly homelessness has been rare
since the reemergence of homelessness in the mid 1980s.
Usually it's been people in their 20s and 30s and 40s,
but now we're approaching close to 30%
of the adult homeless population are people 55 and over.
- [Narrator] This is partly due to the fact
that boomers are such a big cohort, and since the '80s,
they've made up the largest share
of the homeless population.
This chart shows how younger boomers specifically
have made up about a third
of the US homeless population for decades,
but a lot of boomers are also experiencing homelessness
for the first time as they've gotten older.
A 2023 UCSF study found that over 40%
of homeless older adults in California
were homeless for the first time after the age of 50.
For some, this was caused by a major life event
like the death of a spouse or a medical emergency.
For others, especially those living on social security,
it was due to high housing costs.
In Naples, Florida, for example,
there are more elderly homeless people
as social security payments
haven't kept up with rent increases.
There's also a significant number of people who worked jobs
that didn't contribute to social security,
so they're ineligible
for social security income in retirement.
- We see it very often in things like migrant labor,
construction, especially demolition,
high risk kind of jobs that are low skilled.
So instead, they get this program
called Supplemental Security Income,
which is around $950 a month right now.
- [Narrator] Homes at the very bottom of the market
have also been heavily affected
by the nationwide housing shortage.
- The supply of those marginal
but available housing options shrinks
in the context of a very hot real estate market
because even these properties
that were serving very low income people, hotels, motels,
the price is going up for those and the people wanna sell.
They wanna to convert,
knock down new buildings, what have you.
- [Narrator] Low cost assisted living centers,
which were never built in adequate numbers
to handle the large boomer generation,
have also been closing amid staffing shortages
and financial troubles.
Researchers estimate that in New York City alone,
healthcare and shelter costs
will surpass $450 million by 2030.
Academic researchers attribute
the different economic prospects
of the older and younger boomers
to something called the cohort effect,
which is the idea that people born in the same period
share unique experiences as they move across time.
- The older baby boomers in particular,
this is a generation that was coming of age
into an economy that was really booming.
- [Narrator] When they bought homes in the '70s or '80s,
home prices were low and interest rates were high.
- What happened right after that
was that you had four decades
where interest rates basically just fell.
That meant that even though they were entering
into home ownership at a time when rates were high,
they were able to refinance.
- [Narrator] The second half of the boomer generation
came of age during back-to-back recessions.
- They faced a very crowded housing market.
Prices were escalating.
Young adults in particular faced the challenge
of getting entry into the labor market.
- Jobs are hardly coming.
How about you? You hiring?
- [Narrator] The crack cocaine epidemic in the '80s
led many to struggle with homelessness.
- And that population has continued to be at risk
as they've gotten older.
- Sometimes if you miss a window by,
you know, even five years, 10 years,
you're looking at a very different housing market
or you're looking at a very different labor market
and it takes time to catch up.
- [Narrator] Over the next 10 years,
some researchers are counting on
what they call a silver tsunami,
a huge wave of housing inventory from baby boomers
aging out of their homes.
They say this would free up houses
for younger families to move into,
but other housing experts say that's unlikely to happen.
- If you are looking for inventory from that mechanism,
it's gonna be a trickle.
It's not gonna be like this big tsunami
that happens all of the sudden.
- [Narrator] By 2030, all boomers will have reached
traditional retirement age,
which researchers expect will only increase the pressure
on healthcare facilities and shelters.
- We need to fix the federal safety net.
The Biden administration,
the budget that they put out this year
included $3 billion to address elderly homelessness.
I don't think that's likely to pass,
but it's the first time that we've seen
a federal proposal of any kind,
so at least it's out there and it's in the conversation
'cause we should not have destitute elderly
or disabled people in the richest country on Earth.