Aprehensive_Words
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- Oct 18, 2022
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The fun thing is that lots of folks already have roommates, too. That's an observed part of how displacement has happened in neighborhoods like Eastie and Dorchester: 3x kids with white-collar jobs typically out-earn a family of low-wage workers who are competing to rent the same three-bedroom in a three-decker. Up in my neck of the woods on the near-North Shore, this has meant our less-well-off neighbors are usually crowding into units, not multiple unrelated people to an apartment, but multiple unrelated families with kids into one -- it's one of the reasons COVID spread so wildly in places like Chelsea in early 2020, because it was nearly impossible for people to isolate. Like, the working-class people of this region are really taking it on the chin in the current rental market.
And if personal anecdote is any guide, I've never met a renter while living here over the last 10 years who doesn't have at least one other person splitting the rent with them. This includes spouses/partners, but most folks I know (white collar, college-educated social circles) have 2+ others .
Nationally, stats show we certainly had an uptick in household formation in 2020 (folks moving out of roommate situations or parents' basements), when rents dropped, and this clearly helped contribute to unusually high demand this year, but we also just have a demographic "pig in the python" in Mass. of people of the age (20s and 30s) where they're most likely to be striking out on their own after high school or college, or marrying, and that's elevated demand beyond what we've built for as a state.
And if personal anecdote is any guide, I've never met a renter while living here over the last 10 years who doesn't have at least one other person splitting the rent with them. This includes spouses/partners, but most folks I know (white collar, college-educated social circles) have 2+ others .
Nationally, stats show we certainly had an uptick in household formation in 2020 (folks moving out of roommate situations or parents' basements), when rents dropped, and this clearly helped contribute to unusually high demand this year, but we also just have a demographic "pig in the python" in Mass. of people of the age (20s and 30s) where they're most likely to be striking out on their own after high school or college, or marrying, and that's elevated demand beyond what we've built for as a state.