Texas_Signmaker
Very Active Signmaker
You realize the cost of a house does not equate to the cost of living, right?
On what planet?
You realize the cost of a house does not equate to the cost of living, right?
So your equation is...On what planet?
I don't know for sure but I would say that it is because financing a house is a choice and it is not a cost that is easily compared. It doesn't have to be a monthly payment if you have the cash and size, location etc is discretionary. Also, when purchasing real estate, that is considered an investment so if you buy a 1 mil house, when you sell it you should get your 1 mil back plus inflation at a minimum. If you got a loan then your financing expenses would be an investment cost rather than a COL. This is why in business, rent is an expense, real purchase goes on the balance sheet and is not an expense but interest is.Please explain how housing costs are not important in cost of living.
If houses cost way more, then so do apartments.
I just looked up (craigslist) a one bedroom apartment in LA ($1600 - 564 sq ft decent area) and one in Dallas ($700 - 750 sq ft, much nicer)
Explain how this is not relevant in cost of living?
I don't know for sure but I would say that it is because financing a house is a choice and it is not a cost that is easily compared. It doesn't have to be a monthly payment if you have the cash and size, location etc is discretionary. Also, when purchasing real estate, that is considered an investment so if you buy a 1 mil house, when you sell it you should get your 1 mil back plus inflation at a minimum. If you got a loan then your financing expenses would be an investment cost rather than a COL. This is why in business, rent is an expense, real purchase goes on the balance sheet and is not an expense but interest is.
Now, Im not saying a house is a good investment, I actually think it is terrible if you have to finance. I'm also not saying that it is or isn't calculated into COL figures. What is missed in this "how much does it cost" debate are the intangibles of where you live, like cultural experiences, education levels, hobbys, family etc etc. This is a personal lesson that I have learned after moving from the DC area back down south. Like many others, I'm here for the weather. There is a reason the NE and California are highly populated and not everything in life comes down to a dollar bill.
House = apartment = housing, it's freaking semantics. I didn't ignore anything but apparently in your butthurt rush to reply you missed my very first sentence where I said: "I don't know for sure". You asked a question and I posed an explanation, not the gospel. A search on google shows that housing is calculated in COL so none of this matters.you quoted me and then proceeded to ignore the fact that i said if houses are expensive then so are apartments, i even provided statistics to back up my claim.