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The income paradox




When you purchase a home for the very first time, the odds are overwhelming that you will not have the entire amount saved up in your bank account. You will likely need to borrow money from a financial institution by way of a mortgage.  The mortgage will likely be paid monthly from your income over a period of 25 years. Assuming you do not have access to a trust fund, your income is the most fundamental criterion regarding how much you can borrow and how much you can pay monthly.

The picture below is 65 Winding Lane.  It’s a relatively modest, entry level home located near Yonge St. and Clark Avenue in Thornhill - a few blocks from Toronto city limits.  At night, you can hear the buzz of trains going by. You can barely fit one car into the garage and there is enough room in the front yard for about two lawn chairs.  It has three small bedrooms and the smaller rooms can barely fit a queen size bed.  There is not much in the area except some houses and a Red Lobster off Yonge Street. It is safe for all of us to agree that this is a typical entry level home for a young family; perhaps a little on the frugal side, if anything. We can all further agree that a high-income family would likely pass over a house like this because, let’s face it, it is a small dinky home.


Before I tell you the price, let me first give you some context. My parents bought a similar home on this very street just a few doors down back in 1986.  They paid $128,000.00 and put the then minimum of 25% down ($32,000). There was no bidding war. The prevailing mortgage interest rate was a cool 11%. Their combined income was just shy of $59,000.00.

If we break the numbers down further, the price to income price ratio was 2.17 ($128,000 divided by $59,000) and the percentage of their income going to the mortgage costs only was 18.79% ($924/month times 12 months divided by $59,000). It was an affordable entry level home for a young couple with two very young children. 

WARNING: Put your coffee down and stop munching on whatever you are eating to avoid choking before reading the next paragraph.

This home was recently listed for only $1,188,000.00. But it gets better! For reasons only the monkey gods know, its price recently increased to the very appealing $1,388,000.00.

Let’s crunch the numbers: assuming a couple today paid the asking price of $1.38 million, they would need $277,600.00 for a 20% down payment or two times the original selling price of the home. They would also need to pay $5085/month just for the mortgage (assuming 2.7% interest rate).

How many young couples have $277,600.00 sitting in their bank account and earn enough to pay $5085 just in mortgage payments?

Using various online calculators, this couple would need to have a combined income of $210,000.00 just to qualify for the mortgage. If they have any kids or plan on having in the future, well, the income required will be much higher (think $250,000 +). Having a dog could mess up the numbers as well.

What’s happening with incomes in Toronto?

Many people believe that Toronto is a world class city, or has been since at least 1988, depending on who you ask. If this is true, then we should, therefore, have world class incomes.  

We believe that incomes have been rising as everyone seems to be affording bigger and more expense houses and everyone seems to have fancy cars, fancy vacations and fancy phones.  However, we know something is wrong because it seems like others have been getting ahead, but we are just languishing behind. It's a paradox that you likely thought about it at some point recently.  Time for some real data. What has happened to incomes over the past generation?

According to Statistics Canada, the median Toronto family income for all family configurations for 2014 was $75,270.  For couples, it was $83,010.  This means 50% of couples made less than $83,100, and 50% made more. For comparisons sake, Edmonton’s median family income for couples was $110,490 (and real-estate prices are a lot lower there).

As the above chart shows, incomes have been flat for the last 18 years. Except for a large drop in the early 1990's after a recession, incomes have been pretty much the same in the last 30 years.

World class? More like generational stagnation. Incomes have simply been going nowhere.

What about all those rich people aka the "1 percenters"?

In 2014, there were 362,670 individuals who made more than $200,000 across the entire countryThis represents 1.3% of all income tax filers. No, not everyone lives in centre of the Canadian universe [Toronto]. A whole bunch live in Alberta, BC, and Quebec and a few sprinkled elsewhere. The remainder live in the surrounding Toronto area.  Sure, there might be a few people who work cash or don’t declare all their income, that is unavoidable. Even considering the few sketchy cash only individuals, despite popular belief, there simply isn’t a lot of people who are making the big bucks in Toronto.

Which begs the question: how many people earning $200,000 year would rush to purchase 65 Winding Lane? How many doctors, corporate lawyers, successful entrepreneurs or Hydro One executives do you think would want to live in a dinky home like that?

Can the average family purchase 65 Winding Line?

For 2014, the median income for a couple in Toronto was $83,010.  Half of couples made more, half of couples made less. This home is the definition of a lower-end entry level home and we should expect the median income family to be able to afford this property without issue. Or can they?

Now, assuming each person earns roughly the same amount, their combined after-tax income would be $66,248.  The yearly mortgage payments would be $61,020 or 92.1% of their after tax income. This would leave $5228 for food, clothes, transportation, insurance, utilities, other debt payments, vacations, charities, and entertainment.  I would imagine that Meow Mix would be a staple dinner item.  

[Fun fact: In 1989 before real-estate imploded, the average mortgage payment took up only 82% of a family's income]

And the down payment? If this couple was super frugal and could save a ridiculous 40% of their yearly income, they would need 10.47 years to save for the down payment. 10 years without any trips, new vehicles, fun night outs or anything else which costs more than $10.  Birthday's, I would imagine, would have to be celebrated at Tim Horton's.

 What is the price to income ratio for 65 Winding Lane based on the median couple income?

Many financial advisors suggest a ratio of no more than 3.5, and up to 5.0 for a large city such as Toronto.  The price to income ratio for 65 Winding Line is an out-of-control 16.72.  The ratio was under 2.5 for most couples in 1986.  Assuming a ratio of 5.0, the property should be no more than $415,050.

 Joey, there are too many numbers in this blog post, explain it like I'm a 7th grade

Let's recap: It is undisputable that a family income is the key component on how much they can afford when purchasing a home - without sufficient income, you cannot pay the mortgage, utilities, food, transportation, child care, and food for the dog.  Income is the crucial underlying fundamental in real-estate. The median couple income in Toronto is just $83,010.

The income paradox that many of us ponder - everyone else making more money than us - is not supported by the empirical evidence. Couples today are making roughly the same compared to couples 30 years ago. This does not consider that school, utilities and fuel costs are much higher today than in the past even accounting for inflation.  The cruel irony is everything costs more now and we make the same amount.

Dinky homes like 65 Winding Line require a minimum family income of $210,000.00/year which easily crosses the absurd and delusional threshold. A quick search on realtor.ca will yield you similar absurd prices for entry-level homes.  The income to price ratio should not exceed 5 times the family income in a large city, and 3.5 times in a medium size city.  Therefore, a home like 65 Winding Line should be priced around $415,050 based on current income levels (5 x $83,010), not a ridiculous number such as $1,388,000 which is a 16.72 price to income ratio.  

Today, average people are simply unable to buy below average homes. Even higher income couples cannot afford below average homes. Prices have become completely detached from the biggest and most important underlying fundamental criterion - incomes.  Many media pundits are adamant that our incomes will “catch up” to the housing price increases, but that would require everyone getting a 200%++ raise which is the same probability as Trump arguing for a constitutional amendment so Obama can run for a third term.

If we are not earning more, how is it that everyone seems to be buying more expensive houses, cars, vacations and toys?