Wish I lived in Fl said:
The official definition of recession reminds me of the saying "Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics".
Agree to a degree, but would offer that while implicitly trusting statistics---particularly government statistics---is bad, it may be just as bad to think that a local anecdote equates to a global phenomenon. In May, there were 6 houses on my block for sale and people in my neighborhood were acting like THE END IS NEAR, yet today there is only 1 left unsold. Which snapshot in time should I use to characterize the local economy?
The OP made a statement that "Where we live, people are having a hard time selling real estate. Houses are sitting, people are being forced to cut prices, no one is showing up at open houses, etc. My next door neighbor has had his house on the market for 3 months and 5 people have been by to see it."
Well, maybe those folks had gotten greedy and over-priced their homes... Maybe they thought there was some guarantee of 10% annual appreciation...Maybe local property taxes have shot up? The fact that your neighbors' house won't sell doesn't mean the nation's economy is in the crapper.
I see this all the time here... Posts like "my room was dirty so therefore all Mousekeeping sucks." Resist the urge to extrapolate single events to all or nothing conclusions.
Yes,
DVC is a leisure expense and sales will undoubtedly show signs of slowing when the economy slows again. However, the value of a DVC point has outstripped inflation since 1992. An OKW point bought in '92 for $48 adjusted for inflation (
http://minneapolisfed.org/Research/data/us/calc/ ) would/should cost today $69.28---yet OKW resale prices are hovering in the mid-70s.
I don't think DVC membership is a money-making enterprise, or a replacement for a wise broad-based investment strategy, but I only wish I'd bought in sooner...