Bambi wrote: » Same with farms, most of our farmers are on "forever farms" that their forefathers bought for a pittance from the state
Boggles wrote: » Allowing tenant purchases is an inherently good thing, I know from first hand experience and I'd hazard a guess that long term for "DE TAX PAYER" (which also includes the person buying the home which seems to be forgotten) it's cheaper. But above all costs, it's value is immeasurable.
Boggles wrote: » Well not exactly. It didn't belong to "the state" to begin with. The forefathers were paying to get back their forefathers land.
markodaly wrote: » If one wants to continue the ideology of private property ownership over social good,
Boggles wrote: » In the examples I gave clearly private property ownership is for the social good. I have seen it first hand.
markodaly wrote: » So it's anecdotal, good to know.
bubblypop wrote: » Your examples are that anti social behavior is curtailed when social houses are sold & become private. Oh and that people take more pride in their own home than a council owned one. So basically, you are actually against social housing for many of the same reasons as others on this site. A real believer in social housing would believe it should stay in state ownership for the good of those who cannot house themselves.
Boggles wrote: » I'm a believer in affordable housing, for everyone.
Bambi wrote: » Worth remembering that large tracts of housing in Dublin and beyond was social housing, Marino etc. We just did it better back then Same with farms, most of our farmers are on "forever farms" that their forefathers bought for a pittance from the state I've no problem with the idea that citizens should not be indebted to a bank for the rest of our lives just to have a place to live. Big problem with the idea of people expecting everything be provided for them by the taxpayer including a house next to their Mammy.
bubblypop wrote: » So, the state should build & sell houses cheap to people who can afford to buy them They should provide social housing for those who cannot house themselves Two different things. Which, I have no issue with, by the way
markodaly wrote: » Bit of a ramble there Matt. I am sorry, but if you are advocating giving people up to a 50% discount on a house, paid for by the tax payer, then you can take a hike. Social housing is that, social housing, not a shortcut to own a 400,000 house for 200,000 paid over 25 years, while the guy next door has to foot the entire bill and then subsidise the family next door. In no universe is that fair. I understand that there may be limited cases where property can be sold, but it should be done so, where the tax payer recoups costs at a minimum and it should be sold at market rates, not a huge discount. Regardless, if we are to take the European model and not the UK/Irish model, the property will remain in the hands of the LA/State. We need to chill a little on property ownership in this country. Owning a property is not a 'right' and its highly amusing that some people point to Austrian provisioning of social housing as a plus, but then with a straight face advocate selling off these units for a song under a UK/Irish framework, because that is how we always did it here.... You cant have your cake and eat it too.
if you are advocating giving people up to a 50% discount on a house, paid for by the tax payer
I understand that there may be limited cases where property can be sold, but it should be done so, where the tax payer recoups costs at a minimum and it should be sold at market rates, not a huge discount.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » Time limited food stamps as the main welfare distribution in the USA seems to make people very motivated to get work for some bizarre reason. They don't put up with cradle to grave welfare sh!t there. Mrs Cash would be actually street homeless (or quite possibly dead) over there and that's no exaggeration! You are just not allowed live that lifestyle without the consequences.
Matt Barrett wrote: » If I grow an apple and it costs me 5c and I sell it to you for 7c instead of 10c like the man up the street sells them for, nobody is paying for that, it's not a discount and I'm making 2c instead of 5c. There is no loss to me. I'm ahead 2c.
When the tenant or person buys the house, there is no loss to the tax payer. Absolutely none. Zero. Once again you are confusing less profit, with losing money spent.
If I sell a pie which cost me 1 euro to create, for 2 euro. I'm making a euro, even if a man up the street is selling the same kind of pie for 3 euro. I'm not left short, I'm still coming out a euro ahead in profit. As I said, if you sell a pie for €2 but the guy up the road is selling the exact same pies for €3 then you are an idiot.
The trouble is the people with the most money are buying up all the houses to rent them to people with less money.
Therefore unless you are relatively wealthy you will always be a tenant beholden to a market where rates are driven by sales.
If wealthy people are spending large sums to buy houses, the prices will not come down. With rents, if you can't afford rent, the government might sudsidise you, rents won't come down if they are being met.
What does this mean for the working tax payer? He/She is forever beholden to the profit margins of a few. You work hard, pay tax and die having made a few rich people a little richer.
markodaly wrote: » .... ...What is happening though is large companies buy up blocks to rent out. This may not be a bad thing in of itself, it is how its done in Germany and the like. It drives the professionalism of the rental sector. The issue, of course, is supply which drives prices......
beauf wrote: » Professionalism (driving profit) also drives up prices. It's like any privatisation the top expensive end has no problems with supply. While the low end of the market gets ignored. So this also reduces supply and compounds the shortage at the low end. It's doing the same with student housing. But we are still championing "professionalism" while ignoring the full implications of it.
beauf wrote: » It's because other countries have built in controls on profits and the provision of affordable and social housing. It's not as simplistic big landlords good and small landlords bad as your suggesting. It's that in sustainable regulated environment you can create sustainable business models. Not boom and bust like we have here. Big companies in Ireland are taking advantage of the lax rules and lack of controls to exploit market conditions. Which why the crisis is as bad as ever.
beauf wrote: » The issue is not simply supply either. It's demand. The population (immigration etc) is increasing faster than we can supply services. Housing, health, schools, policing, transport. The demand is at the low end of the market but supply is being delivered at the high end. Where we have cheap solutions like cycling, the govt ignores it. We keep voting these govt in. So as a people we can't be that interested in changing anything either. We are politically inert.
Matt Barrett wrote: » Little problem. These people don't call the shots. They get options and are left waiting until those options come up and if they refuse for no good reason they lose their spot on the list.
Horsebox9000 wrote: » What do people think?
Matt Barrett wrote: » When the tenant or person buys the house, there is no loss to the tax payer. Absolutely none. Zero. Once again you are confusing less profit, with losing money spent.
markodaly wrote: » I never said it was simplistic, I alluded to the fact that the core issue is supply. Also, we have had one property crash in the state's history, so it's rare. To add, there are lots of rules and regulations. Property is one of the highest regulated markets we have in this country. That is why it is so expensive to build houses and units.
FreudianSlippers wrote: » You've literally just described a supply-side problem
beauf wrote: » I didn't say it wasn't supply. I said it's not simply supply.