Friday, August 29, 2008
An opinion essay worth reading in today's L.A. Times addresses that question. Headline: "You don't have to own it to make it a home." Kerry Madden writes:
My husband and I have never owned a house -- and may not any time soon, despite the steep drop in home prices. ... We've lived in our current home for 10 years now. We pay $1,400 a month in rent for a five-bedroom in Silver Lake. Our only debt is mounting college loans. Our landlord is a good guy. He's raised the rent only once, and he has a home-warranty plan, which means that if something breaks, the company comes out and fixes it. The neighborhood is full of friends for the kids.
But is it a holding pattern? Shouldn't we look to buy now that prices are finally coming down? But how can we with tuitions going up?
As I say, worth reading. The essay, as I read it, is only partly about the old rent-versus-buy argument, which is pretty much an economic discussion. It's also about the psychic issue of where your home really is, and what makes a place your home.
