Key Takeaways
- The so-called affordability crisis is less about current inflation and more about a diffuse set of micro-level price pressures that vary by person, place, and time.
- Real incomes and wages have recovered on average, yet voters remain focused on specific high-salience prices (housing, electricity, beef, coffee) that politicians weaponize.
- Housing is structurally hard to “fix”: mortgage rates have normalized while home prices remain elevated, leaving payments high for new buyers and room for improvement limited.
- Policy tools (rate cuts, deregulation, subsidies, rent freezes, tariffs) can shift costs at the margin but cannot sustainably deliver falling overall prices without causing a recession or new distortions.
What Happened?
The article examines how the “affordability crisis” has become a central political theme for figures as different as President Trump and New York Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, even as the underlying economics don’t justify the notion of a solvable, singular crisis. After a sharp but temporary inflation spike between 2021 and 2023, headline inflation has fallen from 9% to around 3%, and real incomes and wages have broadly recovered to trend.
Yet public frustration persists, now focused less on the general price level and more on specific items—first eggs, then gasoline, now beef, coffee, and electricity. Politicians have effectively tapped into these shifting irritants, using vivid examples (e.g., rent spikes, transit fares) to frame broad “affordability agendas,” even when those examples are only loosely tied to their proposed solutions.
Why It Matters?
For investors and policymakers, the key message is that “affordability” is a political umbrella term, not a precise economic condition that can be reversed with a single policy lever. Macroeconomic indicators show real income gains and moderating inflation, but households anchor on price levels, not rates of change: they want prices to fall, not merely rise more slowly. That is almost impossible to deliver without inducing a deep recession, and overall price levels rarely decline outside extreme episodes like the Great Depression.
Housing illustrates the structural bind: ultra-low post-2008 mortgage rates pushed home prices up; now rates have normalized, but prices have not fully adjusted down, leaving monthly payments for new buyers elevated. Affordability in housing is now only slightly worse than pre-2008 averages, limiting how much can realistically improve without painful corrections. Meanwhile, policies like tariffs raise consumer costs even as leaders claim to tackle affordability, highlighting the tension between rhetoric and economic reality.
What’s Next?
Looking ahead, “affordability” is likely to remain a permanent political theme rather than a problem that can be “fixed.” Leaders can tweak margins—loosening energy regulations, capping certain drug prices, adjusting housing rules, or expanding subsidies—but each move creates trade-offs, shifting costs across sectors, income groups, or time rather than eliminating them. Efforts like Mamdani’s rent freezes may relieve pressure for some tenants but risk discouraging new supply and worsening vacancies over the long term.
Trump’s push for lower rates via a more politicized Federal Reserve might temporarily lower borrowing costs but would risk higher inflation and rates later, undermining affordability again. For markets, this means persistent pressure on policymakers to be seen “doing something” on prices, ongoing intervention proposals in housing and energy, and a gap between macro data and voter sentiment that will continue to shape election narratives, regulatory risk, and the policy backdrop for rate expectations and rate-sensitive sectors such as real estate, utilities, and consumer staples.












