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Morgan Kelly - Pump a few billion into the middle class coffers?

  • 19-08-2011 10:23am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,941 ✭✭✭


    Surely everyone has heard by now that Morgan Kelly – that much praised economic sear – has called for mortgage forgiveness to the tune of €5-€6bn. In those heady days when I first started posting on Boards many a virtual row I had for advocating such an approach, so I understand the negatives involved.

    What? Re-cap? Ok…people who have been keeping up on their mortgage repayments and weren’t stupid enough to buy a suitable house to live in with their family in 2007 will be up in arms: “why should my neighbour get money knocked off their house when I’m doing very well thank you very much and am not a financial retard like the rest of you sheep”. I understand this, really, fair enough. But it’s the selfish approach. People need to understand it’s a real and viable way to get money back into the real economy and buying the worthless crap you most probably produce in a factory in west Cork or whatever. It means more tax, vat and opportunities for entrepreneurship and therefore employment. It means the banks have less of a stranglehold on the taxpayer who has bailed them out and the unemployed are given that bit more hope.

    Why should the banks take tens of billions of our money yet chase us down for the debts they, in a sense, forced us into in the first place? Are the people against this just cynical, selfish bastards? Has the general AH mood changed in the last year since I has this row? Should I as a working, middle class, income earning, taxpaying member of society get debts written off so I can buy a new flat screen TV? I’ll leave it with ya to ponder. And can I just say to all you geniuses who knew that the housing bubble was about to burst; you are legends and should be running the country. But seeing as you’re not and what’s done is done, is now not the time to try some approach to freeing up disposable income so the economy has a shot in the arm?


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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,679 ✭✭✭Freddie59


    Personally I think it's a ludicrous solution. But it's piggy-backing onto debt forgiveness for:

    Banks
    Developers

    Banks should have been told to eff off. There is no way the taxpayer should be footing the bill.

    Developers are being let off the hook to resume their activities.

    And now they want Joe/Mary taxpayer to pay people's MORTGAGES??!! FFS.

    Yeah. Imagine what that 6Bn could do for education.

    Nobody was stupid. They knew what they were getting into. And should foot the bill THEMSELVES.

    And what about the tens of thousands of taxpayers who have actually PAID their mortgages? Are they to be discriminated against?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    What? Re-cap? Ok…people who have been keeping up on their mortgage repayments and weren’t stupid enough to buy a suitable house to live in with their family in 2007 will be up in arms: “why should my neighbour get money knocked off their house when I’m doing very well thank you very much and am not a financial retard like the rest of you sheep”. I understand this, really, fair enough. But it’s the selfish approach.
    I've not read Morgan Kelly's piece yet, so I'm assuming he's probably addressed this;

    The real problem would not be so much begrudgery. Imagine I have a €300k mortgage on a €150k house, which I'm managing to pay off.
    My neighbour has a €200k mortgage on the same house, but he's struggling. The bank approaches him and says, "You're struggling, so what we'll do is allow you to sell up and walk away with no debt". So the value of my house effectively collapses. The neighbour can sell up for €100k and move on, and any hope that I had of simply chipping away at the mortgae and waiting out the storm, has been lost. From my perspective, I'm now paying money on a mortgage for a house that I cannot leave for about 20 years.
    So why should I bother? Why should I not stop paying?

    The other argument is that you're effectively rewarding people for poor fiscal choices and punishing those who made better choices. That is, those who went for ridiculous mortgages get to walk away and start again, whereas those who have affordable mortgages are still stuck.
    Rewarding the stupid choices and punishing the good is effectively what we did for the banks, just on an individual level.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,298 ✭✭✭cosmicfart


    The 'Banks' which we bailed out, should half the mortgages of people who bought property at a clearly inflated price. Its the banks fault for reckless lending which lead to the property bubble. I dont see why ordinary decent folk already bailing out these criminal institutions should continue to be handicapped by the very same institutions that are responsible for this whole fookin mess in the first place. write off half their debts cus ur not got it get it anyways


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,455 ✭✭✭maudgonner


    cosmicfart wrote: »
    The 'Banks' which we bailed out, should half the mortgages of people who bought property at a clearly inflated price. Its the banks fault for reckless lending which lead to the property bubble. I dont see why ordinary decent folk already bailing out these criminal institutions should continue to be handicapped by the very same institutions that are responsible for this whole fookin mess in the first place. write off half their debts cus ur not got it get it anyways

    The banks are not entirely responsible for the property bubble! Every single person that bought a house at an inflated price made that decision for themselves. Nobody forced their hands. They could have rented. If they had taken an adult approach and looked at their own finances then they would have seen that the numbers only added up while times remained good, and the nature of economies is that there are good times and bad. It's not rocket science - the slump of the 80's is not so long ago that it's forgotten.

    So why, for ***s sake should I, who engaged my brain for long enough to see this for myself, have to pay for the mistakes of people who were too daft/careless/lazy to do the research and now repeatedly refuse to take responsibility for their own mess? Yes, the banks are culpable for lending money too freely, but so are the people who took up the mortgage offers. Full sympathy for anyone who's caught in a debt spiral, but don't try to make me suffer with you, I've got enough worries trying to get by and pay my own rent.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,373 ✭✭✭tonycascarino


    cosmicfart wrote: »
    The 'Banks' which we bailed out, should half the mortgages of people who bought property at a clearly inflated price

    That's just rewarding someone for being an eejit. Tough luck.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,296 ✭✭✭Frank Black


    Well, my understanding of what he is proposing is that people who are unable to service their mortgage would be allowed sell up and walk away with 'some' of the outstanding balance being written off.
    I would imagine that in such a scenario, their credit rating would be badly affected, so they wouldn't be getting away scot-free and I would imagine they would struggle to convince a lending institution to let them take out another mortgage in the short to medium term - so they'll probably be looking at renting for a considerable time. In some cases they'll be too old to ever aspire to take out another 25-30 year mortgage again.
    When people hear the term ‘debt forgiveness’ it sends the wrong message and implies that ‘your neighbour’ is going to get away with recklessly borrowing while you gainfully struggle to pay your debts – I don’t think this will be the case, and the people who have sensibly borrowed and still manage to make their mortgage payments will be better off in the long term than those that don’t.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,679 ✭✭✭Freddie59


    cosmicfart wrote: »
    The 'Banks' which we bailed out, should half the mortgages of people who bought property at a clearly inflated price. Its the banks fault for reckless lending which lead to the property bubble. I dont see why ordinary decent folk already bailing out these criminal institutions should continue to be handicapped by the very same institutions that are responsible for this whole fookin mess in the first place. write off half their debts cus ur not got it get it anyways

    Did you even READ the reply above from Seamus?:confused:

    There are other 'ordinary decent folk' (myself included) who are bailing out these criminals - and paying my mortgage at the same time.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,455 ✭✭✭maudgonner


    Well, my understanding of what he is proposing is that people who are unable to service their mortgage would be allowed sell up and walk away with 'some' of the outstanding balance being written off.


    That seems to be part of his proposal, but according to the article in today's Indo:
    "He said that mortgages would be reduced to a level “deemed affordable” while others would be allowed to leave their properties “without being pursued for outstanding debts"."

    It's the "mortgage principal reduction" part of his proposal that seems the most objectionable to me.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 872 ✭✭✭Sofa King Great


    The impact of this would be to reduce the spending power of those continuing to fund their mortgages. Their payments would remain the same but the increased taxes required to plug the 5bn deficit would mean they'd have less real income.

    I also strongly disagree when people go on about negative equity. People who bought houses at the peak do not have higher debt than they did back then. Whilst it is true that they can no longer sell their home at a profit their debt is no higher than it was when they signed the facility agreement.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,202 ✭✭✭Rabidlamb


    Right, soon as this starts getting political momentum I'm going to stop paying my mortgage for 90 days & go interest only then for the next 6 months.

    Bank comes in & writes off 25% of my mortgage
    I bring the €50 notes back out from under the mattress
    ?????????????
    Profit


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,455 ✭✭✭maudgonner


    I'd also love to see how they're going to get around the problem of people effectively rebuying the house they've just had mortgage forgiven on.

    Say Mary had bought a house at the peak of the boom for 300k, can't make the repayments and walks away. She cannot buy back the house. But her boyfriend John promptly buys the house for 100k. Mary hands John the keys and they continue on as before, except the tax payer has just funded them to the tune of 200k. Are we legally going to be able to stop John from buying the house if they're not married? What if it's her parents that buy it back for her. Her sister? Where do we draw the line, and how do we enforce it? Surely it would be a legal nightmare?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 9,464 ✭✭✭Celly Smunt


    €1 billion worth of vouchers for retail is far more efficient.

    middle class moral maintained and boosted consumer confidence
    Debts paid to banks by retail outlets and probability of more jobs created
    Banks books boosted

    and all of this=a return of tax and generation of money in the local economy


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,298 ✭✭✭cosmicfart


    Freddie59 wrote: »
    Did you even READ the reply above from Seamus?:confused:

    There are other 'ordinary decent folk' (myself included) who are bailing out these criminals - and paying my mortgage at the same time.


    did you even read my post???

    cosmicfart wrote: »
    The 'Banks' which we bailed out, should half the mortgages of people who bought property at a clearly inflated price. Its the banks fault for reckless lending which lead to the property bubble. I dont see why ordinary decent folk already bailing out these criminal institutions should continue to be handicapped by the very same institutions that are responsible for this whole fookin mess in the first place. write off half their debts cus ur not got it get it anyways

    in other words ALL persons who bought property at the height of the boom should have some sort of a reduction. otherwise it wont be fair and the people who still have jobs wont be able to start begrudging others who have lost theirs and now simply dont have money.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,455 ✭✭✭maudgonner


    cosmicfart wrote: »
    did you even read my post???

    in other words ALL persons who bought property at the height of the boom should have some sort of a reduction. otherwise it wont be fair and the people who still have jobs wont be able to start begrudging others who have lost theirs and now simply dont have money.

    And how exactly is that fair on the people who didn't buy and have been "throwing money down the drain" on rent? I'll be paying off your mortgage while you retain an asset. What do I get out of it?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,900 ✭✭✭General General


    Liens on properties held, effectively lengthening mortgage, fine if needs must.

    Leave property & get debt write off - it better be an arrangement close to going bankrupt or else it's a joke.

    Economy needs a shot in the arm of people coming up with businesses focused on export markets... versus horse**** proposals.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 128 ✭✭excaliburhc


    personally i believe this is the best option , had many a discussion at work over this and while i am against the idea of wholesale debt forgiveness , i am an advocate for reducing the mortgage to the actual value of the house and defaulting on the difference . rework the mortgage to the new price and make an arrangement with the owners that suits all - people arent homeless - banks still get money and so on.

    as for the people buying houses they couldnt afford - not everyone who is now defaulting is in that boat , sure some people took the piss and got mortgages for 10 to 20 times their salary to buy second houses / flats / mansions - i have no sympathy for those .

    but when we purchased our house it was a choice of dangerous neighbourhood with a known criminal element for proper money or going to the bank and trying to get a decent sized loan to purchase a house in a "safe area" , lot of people didnt have a choice about the mortgages they required - banks / government drove the house prices up - didnt do anything to deflate the market and in the end when it came to best area for the children - best schools and so on ,with the bank giving mortgages and structuring so that people could pay ,what actual choice did people have.

    oh and the end of the day regardless of anything - the money is just made up - there is no gold bullion that is linked to it , it is just a piece of paper with picture on it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,298 ✭✭✭cosmicfart


    maudgonner wrote: »
    The banks are not entirely responsible for the property bubble! Every single person that bought a house at an inflated price made that decision for themselves. Nobody forced their hands. They could have rented. If they had taken an adult approach and looked at their own finances then they would have seen that the numbers only added up while times remained good, and the nature of economies is that there are good times and bad. It's not rocket science - the slump of the 80's is not so long ago that it's forgotten.

    So why, for ***s sake should I, who engaged my brain for long enough to see this for myself, have to pay for the mistakes of people who were too daft/careless/lazy to do the research and now repeatedly refuse to take responsibility for their own mess? Yes, the banks are culpable for lending money too freely, but so are the people who took up the mortgage offers. Full sympathy for anyone who's caught in a debt spiral, but don't try to make me suffer with you, I've got enough worries trying to get by and pay my own rent.


    yes everyone has to take account for themselves and its not entirely the banks fault but ur just spouting 'im better the the rest of u nonsense' when their are FAMILIES literally gonna be broken up because of this mess, what ur solution if not to give them a helping hand? fook them???


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,436 ✭✭✭c_man


    If people are getting their mortgages forgiven, the very least I want is a PS3. And some games obviously.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 9,464 ✭✭✭Celly Smunt


    personally i believe this is the best option , had many a discussion at work over this and while i am against the idea of wholesale debt forgiveness , i am an advocate for reducing the mortgage to the actual value of the house and defaulting on the difference . rework the mortgage to the new price and make an arrangement with the owners that suits all - people arent homeless - banks still get money and so on.

    as for the people buying houses they couldnt afford - not everyone who is now defaulting is in that boat , sure some people took the piss and got mortgages for 10 to 20 times their salary to buy second houses / flats / mansions - i have no sympathy for those .

    but when we purchased our house it was a choice of dangerous neighbourhood with a known criminal element for proper money or going to the bank and trying to get a decent sized loan to purchase a house in a "safe area" , lot of people didnt have a choice about the mortgages they required - banks / government drove the house prices up - didnt do anything to deflate the market and in the end when it came to best area for the children - best schools and so on ,with the bank giving mortgages and structuring so that people could pay ,what actual choice did people have.

    oh and the end of the day regardless of anything - the money is just made up - there is no gold bullion that is linked to it , it is just a piece of paper with picture on it.

    long term lease


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,296 ✭✭✭Frank Black


    .

    but when we purchased our house it was a choice of dangerous neighbourhood with a known criminal element for proper money or going to the bank and trying to get a decent sized loan to purchase a house in a "safe area" ,


    You actually had a third choice, namely not to take out a large mortgage in the first place and rent.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,597 ✭✭✭Richard tea


    Absolutely, ''i am an advocate for reducing the mortgage to the actual value of the house and defaulting on the difference'' & this would free up millions to be spent in the local economy. As far as im concerned, the sh*t has not hit the fan yet. Plans should be acted on asap before there is no going back.





    personally i believe this is the best option , had many a discussion at work over this and while i am against the idea of wholesale debt forgiveness , i am an advocate for reducing the mortgage to the actual value of the house and defaulting on the difference . rework the mortgage to the new price and make an arrangement with the owners that suits all - people arent homeless - banks still get money and so on.

    as for the people buying houses they couldnt afford - not everyone who is now defaulting is in that boat , sure some people took the piss and got mortgages for 10 to 20 times their salary to buy second houses / flats / mansions - i have no sympathy for those .

    but when we purchased our house it was a choice of dangerous neighbourhood with a known criminal element for proper money or going to the bank and trying to get a decent sized loan to purchase a house in a "safe area" , lot of people didnt have a choice about the mortgages they required - banks / government drove the house prices up - didnt do anything to deflate the market and in the end when it came to best area for the children - best schools and so on ,with the bank giving mortgages and structuring so that people could pay ,what actual choice did people have.

    oh and the end of the day regardless of anything - the money is just made up - there is no gold bullion that is linked to it , it is just a piece of paper with picture on it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,280 ✭✭✭✭Eric Cartman


    im in no way saying forgive the principal of a mortgage, thats getting something for free, but banks that received bailout money should have to forgive all the interest going forward on all mortgages up to the point at which theyve 'forgiven' the equivalent of what they got in bailouts . It helps the people struggling to pay and it doesnt cost the tax payer anything , and for the bank - getting back the principal each month rather than f*ck all of the interest will decrease their risk and get them a higher rating. It helps people own their homes faster as no interest , so helps the people who can pay their mortgages to have more disposable income to spend and get the economy rolling again


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,298 ✭✭✭cosmicfart


    maudgonner wrote: »
    And how exactly is that fair on the people who didn't buy and have been "throwing money down the drain" on rent? I'll be paying off your mortgage while you retain an asset. What do I get out of it?

    obviously persons renting who are now struggling because they have lost their job dont also have 300K of a mortgage hanging over their head yet still have to find money for their home/rent, it is far far easier to obtain cheap rental accommodation now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    cosmicfart wrote: »
    in other words ALL persons who bought property at the height of the boom should have some sort of a reduction. otherwise it wont be fair and the people who still have jobs wont be able to start begrudging others who have lost theirs and now simply dont have money.
    Of course the question there is, where is the cut-off.

    At this stage, anyone who bought a house after 2004, could possibly be in negative equity. In 2 years time, houses could be down to the levels of 2000, which means that anyone who bought since 2002 is likely in NE. How do you fairly label a mortgage-holder as being a "boom" buyer without unfairly disadvantaging his neighbour who happened to buy 2 months earlier at a slightly lower price?

    In reality any debt forgiveness or mortgage reduction scheme would need to come with caveats that make it desirable for people in real difficulty but without opening loopholes for people to abuse it.

    So for example, for people in negative equity who need to move (house is too small, have split up, whatever), give them the option to walk away, debt-free, but with the mortgage recorded as a default on their credit history.
    This frees them from the property burden, allowing them to move and rent a more appropriate property, but prevents them from getting straight back into the property market. In fact they'll have difficulty getting any credit for five years.

    For people having payment difficulties on huge mortgages, but in homes which are adequate, allow their debt to be reduced to the current market value of the property. But add in a "clawback" provision. So if they sell before the mortgage is 50% finished, the bank takes everything, i.e. they homeowner walks with nothing. If they sell before 75% is done, the bank takes half the profit, or something along similar lines.

    The council operated a similar scheme during boom years to discourage people from flipping properties when they had a council mortgage.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,455 ✭✭✭maudgonner


    cosmicfart wrote: »
    yes everyone has to take account for themselves and its not entirely the banks fault but ur just spouting 'im better the the rest of u nonsense' when their are FAMILIES literally gonna be broken up because of this mess, what ur solution if not to give them a helping hand? fook them???

    I'm absolutely not saying that I'm better than everyone else :mad:. And I have no problem with giving people a helping hand, I have genuine sympathy for anyone that's in trouble with debt.

    But owning your own home is a privilege, not a right, and I don't believe this is going to prevent families being broken up. I think it's a simplistic, unfair solution that might sound popular to people that find themselves in financial difficulty, but that in reality will end up hurting more people than it helps, will be a huge slap in the face to the thousands upon thousands of households that are scrimping and saving and making huge sacrifices to service their debts, and wind up putting the economy in a worse position than it is now, at a huge cost to the taxpayer.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 9,464 ✭✭✭Celly Smunt


    im in no way saying forgive the principal of a mortgage, thats getting something for free, but banks that received bailout money should have to forgive all the interest going forward on all mortgages up to the point at which theyve 'forgiven' the equivalent of what they got in bailouts . It helps the people struggling to pay and it doesnt cost the tax payer anything , and for the bank - getting back the principal each month rather than f*ck all of the interest will decrease their risk and get them a higher rating
    the banks at the end of the day are a business though,but an essential service,therefore they don't have to please anyone as such but keep their margins on target,they could raise it another 5 percent if they really want to



    He who controls the money supply of a nation controls the nation- james a garfield

    and the ECB and Germany control the money supply


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 872 ✭✭✭Sofa King Great


    If they were to give a write off for people who bought at the peak then they should also take the profits made by people on property during the peak.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,679 ✭✭✭hidinginthebush


    c_man wrote: »
    If people are getting their mortgages forgiven, the very least I want is a PS3. And some games obviously.

    If I'm going to be funding the mortgages of the fools who bough shoeboxes for 350K, then I want a guarantee of a permanent job! (And a PS3, obviously ;))


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 9,464 ✭✭✭Celly Smunt


    Free Hat!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,900 ✭✭✭General General


    cosmicfart wrote: »
    yes everyone has to take account for themselves and its not entirely the banks fault but ur just spouting 'im better the the rest of u nonsense' when their are FAMILIES literally gonna be broken up because of this mess, what ur solution if not to give them a helping hand? fook them???

    Here we go... the passion!!! It'll be devastating!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Thank goodness for posts like these to bring us all to our senses.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,280 ✭✭✭✭Eric Cartman


    pmcmahon wrote: »
    the banks at the end of the day are a business though,but an essential service,therefore they don't have to please anyone as such but keep their margins on target,they could raise it another 5 percent if they really want to



    He who controls the money supply of a nation controls the nation- james a garfield

    and the ECB and Germany control the money supply

    yes but with banks currently having all these risky assets on their books and people barely meeting the interest payments they wont be able to sustain a business in any manor or get credit themselves, if they foragave the interest , all the payments would deplete those risky assets and improve the banks credit situation, allowing them to make money borrowing to businesses and people who want new mortgages who arent so high risk.

    Also they took our money in the form of bailouts, they owe us a favour or 2


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,455 ✭✭✭maudgonner


    I have no interest in a PS3, so clearly this will be unfair on me too. Maybe cosmicfart is right and I'm just moaning selfishly!

    I'll take my payment in chocolate, on an ongoing monthly basis. Chocolate that's made in Ireland, obviously, thereby providing a boost to the economy...hang on, I think AH may have just made this madcap strategy work :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,603 ✭✭✭grumpymunster


    So far as I am aware the plan is to look at those in trouble with their residence not investment or holiday property. People have very short merories when you have a leader of a country advocating at a conference that those who talk down the country should commit suicide and that there is no risk in buying property, then the ordinary people can be forgiven to my mind.
    And Bertie was not the only one advocating this banks generally encouraged people to buy houses this year in case they cant afford them next year.
    It must be great to look back with such rosy glasses.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 655 ✭✭✭minotour


    A good discussion, one worth having whatever the outcome. Im in an inflated priced mortgage and no doubt ill be left to pay my own way, still if it motivates the markets to some sort of recovery then lets get the ball rollling. Fact is we are all already paying and sure as sh1t its gonna get worse before it gets better.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,370 ✭✭✭Knasher


    So you are proposing that the government saddle us all with new and massive debt, at the absolutely abysmal rates we can currently get. And the very best thing we could do with that money is to just give it away to a small proportion of the population and then hope they won't just leave the country and that they will use it to prop up the local economy.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,597 ✭✭✭Richard tea


    Knasher wrote: »
    So you are proposing that the government saddle us all with new and massive debt, at the absolutely abysmal rates we can currently get. And the very best thing we could do with that money is to just give it away to a small proportion of the population and then hope they won't just leave the country and that they will use it to prop up the local economy.


    Yes


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,791 ✭✭✭JJJJNR


    Oh here we go, single people moaning about couples with kids.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,915 ✭✭✭MungBean


    Would a better solution be (if the state is gonna spend this 5-6Bn anyway) instead of debt forgiveness, ease the pressure by lending to homeowner via mortgage assistance ?

    Person under pressure with mortgage, instead of banks getting bailed out because they need the return or the person getting bailed out because he cant keep the up the payments. The state pays a percentage of the mortgage, reducing the payments to be maid by the person. Person can afford to pay mortgage and banks have gotten some return to shore up their books for the short term with the lump sums off the mortgage.

    Out of the payments that are being made the state takes a mortgage assistance payment which goes towards paying back the monies they put in to ease the pressure on the banks and home owner. Nobody gets anything for nothing, pressure is eased all round and in due time the 5-6Bn will be paid back by the people who used it and not johnny taxpayer who didnt cause the mess, didnt benefit from the mess and doesnt need money to get out of the mess.

    Plus with people under less financial strain their normal spending increases and the economy benefits.

    You might at this point realise I dont have a degree in economics so excuse me if this is all rubbish. Just be kind in your shooting down of the idea.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,296 ✭✭✭Frank Black


    So far as I am aware the plan is to look at those in trouble with their residence not investment or holiday property. People have very short merories when you have a leader of a country advocating at a conference that those who talk down the country should commit suicide and that there is no risk in buying property, then the ordinary people can be forgiven to my mind.
    And Bertie was not the only one advocating this banks generally encouraged people to buy houses this year in case they cant afford them next year.
    It must be great to look back with such rosy glasses.


    You obviously don't think or believe that 'ordinary people' are capable of thinking for themselves?

    If you make financial decision involving 100's of thousands of euro on the basis of what some politician says at a conference then you don't get much in the way of sympathy from me.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,528 ✭✭✭foxyboxer


    If the government begins to introduce these measures I hope Alison O'Riordan is the first to benefit.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 730 ✭✭✭gosuckonalemon


    Morgan Kelly is a highly respected Economist. He predicted years ago that our economy was unsustainable and a recession/property collapse was inevitable. I think I'll take his word on this one.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,679 ✭✭✭Freddie59


    I suppose this is all part of a greater cycle of evil and greed. For example, last week I had to visit two consultants. One charged €100 for a visit; the other €180. Thankfully I am in a position to pay.

    The latter saw three people in 20 minutes - or €15 per minute. The average pay of a consultant in Ireland is €500k PA - in Germany it is limited to €96K by law. We have the ludicrous situation where consultants are provided with private rooms in public hospitals.....for 20% of their time in return.

    Public sector rates in Ireland are 50% above private sector rates. This money is being raised from a diminishing private sector workforce.

    We have politicians claiming three (very high) pensions in some instances. No-one should receive a pension until they are at least 65.

    We have failed business entities (banks) being propped up by the taxpayer for bad private business deals.

    And now we want to splurge another €6bn on 'forgiving debt'.:rolleyes:

    What a country. So, you see, unless it's tackled from the top (which it will never be - as the highest earners are the ones making up the rules as they go along) nothing will change. At all.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,679 ✭✭✭Freddie59


    Morgan Kelly is a highly respected Economist. He predicted years ago that our economy was unsustainable and a recession/property collapse was inevitable. I think I'll take his word on this one.

    That doesn't make him right this time. And I would be a strong admirer of his.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,560 ✭✭✭Wile E. Coyote


    What I'd like to see happen is the government force banks who benefitted from a bailout to drop the interest rate on all homeloan mortgages, bought during the boom, to 2% and fix them there for the next 5-10 years. This would still hold people responsible for the principle amount that they borrowed but would significantly reduce their monthly bill. Any one who isn't struggling to meet their payment could maintain the current amount and clear down their negative equity a lot sooner putting them in a position to sell the house if they wanted.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,679 ✭✭✭Freddie59


    So far as I am aware the plan is to look at those in trouble with their residence not investment or holiday property. People have very short merories when you have a leader of a country advocating at a conference that those who talk down the country should commit suicide and that there is no risk in buying property, then the ordinary people can be forgiven to my mind.
    And Bertie was not the only one advocating this banks generally encouraged people to buy houses this year in case they cant afford them next year.
    It must be great to look back with such rosy glasses.

    Not rosy - realistic. Like many others we had over €250k in equity in our home back in 2006 which we could have realised and taken the plunge into oblivion. Thanks fully we didn't - because we lived through the 19880s.....and 14% interest rates. People scoffed at us and told us we were stupid not to. We borrowed IR£5K towards our home over five years in 1981. We paid back €9.5K. But we paid it back.

    And where do you draw the line when deciding who's eligible? A la medical card? Where, if you're a couple of Euro over a threshold you don't get it - but your neighbour (a couple of Euro under does? Great plan. Not.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,455 ✭✭✭maudgonner


    Morgan Kelly is a highly respected Economist. He predicted years ago that our economy was unsustainable and a recession/property collapse was inevitable. I think I'll take his word on this one.

    But in fairness, I predicted years ago that property prices were ridiculous and had to come down, and I'm a feckin' numpty, so I wouldn't put too much store in that!

    (And so did my mam ("where are they going to find the people to fill all these houses?"), and many others, but I'm not gonna call them numpties just to make a point on AH :))


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,065 ✭✭✭Fighting Irish


    People who make mistakes are usually the people who need to learn from their mistakes the hard way


  • Posts: 31,118 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I think that most people haven't seen the memo yet!
    Infinite growth can't happen in a finite world, we have reached the limits of growth!
    The amount of economic growth needed to repay all these mortgages and all other investments simply isn't there and is never coming back.

    Have a look at this link http://www.theoildrum.com/node/8268#more for an explanation as to why growth is now a thing of the past.

    With these points in mind, take another look at debt forgiveness in all its forms.
    Leaving these unpayable debts in the system just mean that the can gets kicked down the road and it's getting bigger every time.

    All money is loaned into existence, therefore all debt was created out of thin air, an across the board writedown would benefit everyone (except investors) in the economy, otherwise the debts will just continue to grow indefinitely.


  • Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 32,387 Mod ✭✭✭✭DeVore


    This only looks like a good idea, while in fact being a sh*t idea, because we have made even sh*tter decisions before it.

    DeV.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,984 ✭✭✭Venom


    A better idea would be for interest rates on home mortgages to be reduced.


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