The math behind:
Overview
In today’s world, working full-time at minimum wage doesn’t come close to buying a home. In 2025, the U.S. federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour — about $15,000 a year before taxes. At that income, housing experts say a home should cost no more than three times annual income, meaning the average minimum-wage earner can only afford a $45,000 home. The real median home price? Over $420,000. But in the Sheconomy timeline, gender parity began in 1925 — reshaping both wages and housing policy. Women’s stronger political voice led to productivity-indexed wages, so pay grew alongside the economy. Women legislators and philanthropists — who historically direct more funding to community and social priorities — invested in large-scale non-market housing, like Community Land Trusts, which separate land cost from home cost. Together, these changes kept wages fair and housing affordable. By 2025, anyone working full-time, even at the minimum wage, could afford to own a home — safely, sustainably, and without debt.
Women are 22 percentage points more likely than men to support raising the minimum wage.
The U.S. federal minimum wage (unchanged since 2009). Equivalent to $15,080 per year for a full-time worker.
Financial planners define affordable housing as no more than 30% of household income spent on housing costs.
Events that led up to it
1925: Alternate reality begins
In this experiment, we went back 100 years and made women and men equal in the economy. Key changes included making women 50% of company executives, 50% of stock market investors, 50% of the startup founders getting funded, and 50% of financial decision makers at home.
1925
Economic Equality Begins
Women hold equal economic power — shaping wages, investments, and public priorities from the start.
1930s
Fair Wage Policies Enacted
Women legislators ensure that wages rise alongside productivity, protecting workers from income stagnation.
1950s
Community Housing Movement Expands
Equal philanthropic funding drives the creation of large-scale non-market housing — affordable by design.
1980s
Wage and Housing Parity Achieved
The minimum wage remains indexed to productivity, keeping full-time work tied to a living wage. Homeownership becomes accessible to everyone.
2020s
Housing for All
Minimum-wage workers own homes in every state. Community Land Trusts, cooperatives, and fair-wage policies keep the housing market stable and inclusive.
