Tuesday, February 10, 2026

The Affordability Conundrum

According to a recent online post by CNBC, “Affordability is a buzzword right now.” That certainly seems to be the case, but what does affordable mean? Dictionaries define affordable as “able to be afforded” or “having a cost that is not too high”—but those definitions are so ambiguous they have little meaning. Despite its current popularity, affordability seems clearly to be a conundrum. 


Marked cost-of-living increases in the past year have sparked widespread discussion about affordability. In campaigning for the 2024 election, the current POTUS promised that “starting the day I take the oath of office, I will rapidly drive prices down and we will make America affordable again.”

In a September 2024 speech, Trump promised to get gasoline “below 2 dollars a gallon,” and said this would bring down “the price of everything from electricity rates to groceries, airfares, and housing costs.” Obviously, that hasn’t happened, so what the president says about affordability and what a majority of the voters perceive is a distinct part of the affordability conundrum.

In 2025, gas prices did go down by about 30 cents a gallon (from an average of $3.10 to about $2.80). That has made gasoline more affordable, but $2.80 is a long way from below $2.00—and that decrease is mostly due to lower crude oil prices and weaker global demand rather than due to something Trump did or didn’t do. No president has much influence on gas prices.

As you know, the Olympic Winter Games are now in progress, but the drawing for inexpensive tickets for the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles went on sale last month. In fact, I decided to write this blog article when I saw an announcement saying, “Affordable tickets for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics start at $28.”

But, I thought, what about travel and lodging expenses? What is the use of buying an affordable ticket if you don’t have enough money for traveling to LA or staying in a hotel there? According to AI, it is estimated that round-trip flights from Kansas City (where I live) to LA will likely be $400 to $800, and a two-night stay in a LA hotel about the same—a minimum of $1,200 for one person!

So, the “affordable” ticket ends up not seeming so affordable after all.

What about “affordable housing”? There is much in the news media about that issue currently. What is termed affordable housing typically limits costs to 30% of household income to avoid burdening limited means. Obviously, what is “affordable” for middle- and top-income households is certainly not affordable for low-income families.

“Affordable groceries” also depends on one’s income. From what I have found, low-income households spend almost 33% of their after-tax income on food. According to 2023 USDA data, those in the lowest income quintile have an average after-tax income of $16,171, and the average spent annually for food was $5,278.

That percentage of income far exceeds the 10-15% typical for median earners and especially the slightly more than 8% for high earners. And my guess is that the median- and certainly the high-earners eat far better (more delicious and more nutritious) food than low-income people. So, affordability relates to far more than just how much something costs.

The most reasonable approach to affordability seems to be with those who advocate democratic socialism, such as Senator Bernie Sanders, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and Mayor Zohran Mamdani in New York City (the same three I also mentioned at the end of my Nov. 10 blog post).

Mayor Mamdani has repeatedly said that affordability is the central crisis facing New Yorkers, and he frames most major policy proposals around lowering the cost of living for working‑class residents. His public statements emphasize rent relief, affordable housing construction, cheaper essentials, and investments that help families stay in the city.

Mamdani links affordability to daily essentials, proposing city‑owned grocery stores to reduce food prices; fast, fare‑free buses to cut transportation costs; no‑cost childcare and support for newborns. He argues these reduce the financial burden on families and help them remain in the city. This, he says, can and will be done by levying higher taxes on those who are wealthy.

So, as we think about the affordability conundrum, let’s consider what that means for all our fellow citizens and not just for us in the middle class. And let’s continue to oppose the present administration’s policies that have shifted so much money from the lower classes to the billionaires who are profiting “bigly” from their benefactor in the White House.   

4 comments:

  1. About five minutes ago, I received these warm, affirmative comments from local Thinking Friend David Nelson:

    "What a great shoutout for democratic socialism. You have explained it very well and advocated it even better. It’s too bad that many only listen to the misunderstanding of democratic socialism, but the three you mention are right on.

    "Keep sharing your wisdom."

    ReplyDelete
  2. Late this morning, I received two brief emails from the same Thinking Friend who lives near St. Louis:

    "I don’t believe there is such a thing as democratic socialism. I think that any kind of socialism is anti democratic."

    "Trump’s actions (opposed to his words) have always been to enhance the incomes of the highest 1 percent of Americans."

    ReplyDelete
  3. And here are substantial, explanatory comments from Thinking Friend Eric
    Dollard in Chicago:

    "Thanks, Leroy, for raising some tough questions about 'affordability.' Trump made promises about inflation, which neither he, nor any other president, could possibly keep, but enough voters believed him and voted for him anyway. Presidents have more power to increase prices than lower them through tariffs or by instigating a war. The prices for most commodities are set by the relationship between supply and demand. Food prices are higher, for example, because of things beyond the control of the president, such as bird flu, bad harvests, climate change, etc. These sources of inflation are structural. The only way to bring down food prices is through more production of food, imports (e.g., Argentinian beef), or government subsidies (e.g., agricultural price support programs). Demand for food is 'inelastic,' the price of food depends primarily on supply.

    Housing costs are more complicated, partly because of the cost of land, the supply of which is limited. Tariffs on Canadian lumber makes construction more expensive, but Trump is not really interested in affordable housing. As a real estate mogul, he wants higher real estate prices. To bring down the high cost of housing will require lower tariffs on imported building materials and incentives for builders to build more affordable housing, incentives which do not currently exist. Home construction has also been affected by ICE operations as many construction workers are immigrants. Some construction projects in Chicago have been slowed or ended because of a lack of workers.

    "Trump's policies are more likely to increase prices further rather than lower or stabilize them. That was my view when I voted for Harris, whose economic policies made more sense; it is still my view."

    ReplyDelete
  4. The lives of most people are dominated by political economics, not market economics. By this I mean, the difference between an educated slave in the ancient world and an educated middle class person today is politics, not economics. One irony of this is that inequality hurts everyone, even the rich. I just read an article explaining this in terms of current healthcare. Even the rich die young in an economically polarized country like the United States. You can read it here: https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2026/02/americas-real-health-crisis-inequality-and-a-generation-pays.html

    For a deeper general dive, Josh Allan Dykstra has a video explaining how modern economics is a lie, and makes some (political) suggestions to improve it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cinXKG-CtnE

    Finally, to bring it home for Christians, in an up-and-down book, Paul writes in 1 Timothy 6:3-10 a call for moderation that concludes with the famous line "The love of money is the root of all evil."

    ReplyDelete