As an only child, why is it difficult to buy a house after 1980 and there are too many houses to live in after 1990?

When the post-80s generation is still under the great pressure of life and work, and rushing on the road of repaying the mortgage, the post-90s generation has already become the main force in the real estate market and stepped onto the stage of the property market.

Born in 1980, the "post-80s" has entered the threshold of 30 years old. Standing at thirty is no longer far away for the former "little emperor" and "little princess"; It is no longer just a state of "looking forward". Once the vision, the fantasy of the future, in the 20-year-old to 30-year-old "qualitative change" gradually awake.

Did not catch up with welfare housing distribution, but caught up with high housing prices; Instead of catching up with the entrepreneurial tide, it caught up with the labor shortage for 20 10 years, and the "post-80 s" caught in the tide of times change officially entered the "year of standing", and the pain brought by times change is also coming to the "post-80 s". They missed the welfare housing allocation, but caught up with the high housing prices; They failed to catch up with the tide of entrepreneurship, but they caught up with the labor shortage. Parents have ardent expectations, high employment pressure and high mortgage, and "post-80s generation" can be called "negative generation". Recently, house prices have rebounded rapidly, and houses have become a hot topic for the people. Recently, some netizens posted, "The house made the post-80s generation a beat generation.

More and more post-90s generation have no worries about housing, and most of them "inherited" real estate from their elders, which is more obvious for post-90s generation living in cities. Maybe you are not satisfied with the inherited property, but you can completely sell the old one for a new one, with almost no pressure. At present, urbanization continues, and a large number of young people will still flood into cities. The greater hope of solving the housing problem of young people in big cities lies in both renting and selling. Especially this year, a series of hot words such as self-sustaining plots, long-term rental apartments, credit rental, and leasing pilots flooded into the property market, all of which are becoming a reality step by step.

Whether it is inheritance, renting or buying a house, it is different from the deep-rooted concept of buying a house after 80. For this special group after 90, there may be more housing choices in the future.