The Manufactured Housing Trap: How America Turned Homeownership Into a Managed Scarcity Machine
The American housing crisis did not fall out of the sky. It was built. Layer by layer. Policy by policy. Loan by loan. Zone by zone. Purchase by purchase. The 30-year mortgage was once sold as a ladder into stability. It stretched payments across decades and helped ordinary families access homes they could never buy outright. In its early form, it expanded ownership and gave working families a path into the middle class. But every tool that expands access can later be captured by price. Once the system knew buyers could borrow over 30 years, home prices had room to rise. The monthly payment became the target. Not the true price. Not the real wage. Not the long-term burden. Just the monthly payment. That was the first trap. Then came zoning. Exclusionary zoning turned housing supply into a guarded gate. Single-family-only rules, minimum lot sizes, parking requirements, density bans, height limits, and neighborhood veto power quietly restricted what could be built and who could afford to...