I found on MSN Careers.
According to their survey, "81 percent of 18- to 25-year-olds said getting rich is either the most important or the second-most important goal in their lives".
Let me repeat. 81% thought getting rich was their primary life goal.
81%
I posted this before on a different thread, but here's . In short, society goes through different cycles, and one of those cycles occurs when nobody cares any longer about creating wealth. They just want to acquire wealth.
Which brings me to a point, what is wealth? Really, fundamentally what is wealth? At it's basic level (think barter society), wealth is only created when something is made or repaired or grown. Corn has worth. It can be traded for something else material based on simple economics. So does an automobile, a chair, and a light bulb.
But some would have you believe that every transaction that occurs is wealth creation. Let's be clear here, that is flat out false. If I (barter system again) trade corn that I grow for a massage, no wealth is created. I have received a service, which I may value more than the material wealth. The person providing that service has acquired some material wealth, but no new wealth is created. It is simply a transaction of wealth. What if I borrow money for something and pay back with interest? The interest payments are not wealth creation, only wealth transfer.
Let me bring this back to the housing bubble. Very little wealth was created. The only activities that created wealth were houses/condos being built, and upgrades people made. That's it. Which leads me to a speculation. I believe that if someone had good tabs on total housing value in 2001, the mean value of new housing at that time, and then if we made up an estimate of average housing upgrades over the last 6 years, you could probably figure out exactly how much housing wealth was actually created in that time. Then if you took the federal numbers for total housing assets, subtracted new construction and upgrades, you would know almost exactly what the US market is actually worth.
I'm not sure how to do this, but I don't know if we even need to, because the thought experiment makes it pretty clear what kind of numbers we would see (I think).