Yes, but that also comes with the notion that a wealthy family can become poor by moving to a higher-cost area, or a poor family can become wealthy by moving to a lower-cost area; ie, someone can sell a small house in the Bay area and buy a manor estate in the countryside.
There's nothing wrong with that notion, but some will find it odd that, before that transaction happens, a family owning an upscale countryside home is wealthier than a family owning a cramped Bay area home, but after that move happens, the family that moved in from the Bay area is now the wealthier one.
It means that merely having the option to sell your home and buy a countryside manor doesn't make you wealthy until you actually follow through with it.
There's nothing wrong with that notion, but some will find it odd that, before that transaction happens, a family owning an upscale countryside home is wealthier than a family owning a cramped Bay area home, but after that move happens, the family that moved in from the Bay area is now the wealthier one.
It means that merely having the option to sell your home and buy a countryside manor doesn't make you wealthy until you actually follow through with it.