And for key measures of house prices - like Case-Shiller and CoreLogic - we have indexes, not actually prices.
But we can construct a ratio of the house price indexes to some measure of income.
For this graph I decided to look at house prices and the National Average Wage Index from Social Security.
This graph shows the ratio of house price indexes divided by the National Average Wage Index (the Wage index is first divided by 1000).
This uses the annual average CoreLogic and the National Case-Shiller index since 1976.
As of 2015, house prices were somewhat above the median historical ratio - but far below the bubble peak. Prices have increased further in 2016, but house prices relative to incomes are still below the 1989 peak.
Going forward, I think it would be a positive if wages outpaced, or at least kept pace with house prices increases for a few years.
Notes: The national wage index for 2015 is estimated using the same increase as in 2014.
from
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/CalculatedRisk/~3/J9-6mx0YX2M/house-prices-to-national-average-wage.html
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