There are a few ways in which the inequitable theme plays out. On the one hand, a range of public policies subsidize homeowners to accumulate wealth, and we don't have the associated corresponding subsidies for renters. That is an inequality in society.
The degree to which we have been recognizing that home prices have been leaving earnings behind and that we've been slow to address that it's a concern or a problem reflects an inequity. We're not keen to tell people who've made gains in their homes that we might want to slow that down because it's hurting their kids and grandchildren. That would be another kind of problem.
Of course, these intergenerational tensions and tensions between owners and renters also intersect with a range of other power dynamics related to class, race, newcomer status, gender and so on. Again, that would be another range of inequalities.