Kiwis were brought up with a bricks and mortar mentality. The idea of putting money every week into a landlord's pocket was an unpalatable prospect, it was dead money, it could be used paying off a mortgage and that's what most of us did.
Buying a house has always been a bit of a struggle but the more attractive God's Own has become as a place to live the more unaffordable housing has become.
People just a few years back living in a hovel in Howick are now millionaires and that's made those of us who didn't have the dosh as a down payment feel dismal. Chances of getting a foot on the home ownership ladder don't look like improving in the foreseeable future with ownership rates in this country now at a 60-year low.
Just five years ago houses across the country were worth 30 per cent less than what they are today while the money you're earning increased by just 15 per cent.
Not only is the wage/house price gap widening, so is the amount of money you're required to come up with for a deposit: 20 per cent thanks to the Reserve Bank's loan to value ratios.