JJJackal wrote: » If we end up with so called helicopter money there will be inflation? If there is inflation house prices will rise Time will tell
cnocbui wrote: » There hasn't been meaningful inflation in the west for over a decade. It's an economic concept that no longer exists, for practical purposes. Helicopter money is never of a sufficient scale to move the needle. Australia did it in 2010 and it got to 3% then was back at 1% 2 years later.
JJJackal wrote: » The West has not faced a crisis or predicted recession/depression like this in nearly 80 years
cnocbui wrote: » I didn't think inflation was a characteristic of recessions and depression. I lived through the stagflation of the late 70's. Unless there is a renaissance in organized labour activisim and a concomitant improvement in the current pattern of wealth distribution, I don't think there will ever be inflation again.
eagle eye wrote: » I get that but people are taking houses that off the market. There's around a 5% reduction in houses on the market in the last five days. If you couple that with the printing of money then things mightn't change much. You'll need to see more houses on the market for prices to come down.
OttoPilot wrote: » If there is helicopter money, do you really expect that the government will be giving out enough to increase house prices? Property values are primarily driven by availability of credit. Everything will depend on what the banks do. If mortgage lending is restricted, prices will fall. Other areas of the economy may experience inflation instead.
James 007 wrote: » Its already happening in the UK too from the attached article, squeeze on credit means a drop in house prices:)
Zenify wrote: » That article could be from 2010 for all we know. Please provide a better source or a link. Something with a date even...
combat14 wrote: » the middle class are already taxed to their eyeballs time to widen the tax net - lots of others not paying any tax in this country
I want to emphasise the unbroken record of increased production, and we will continue this trend in 2009
Ozark707 wrote: Prices are set at the margin, so even if there a reduction in supply prices should come down due to the simple fact that credit is tightening.
cnocbui wrote: » There hasn't been meaningful inflation in the west for over a decade. It's an economic concept that no longer exists, for practical purposes.
Diarmuid wrote: » Now that's a quote! Inflation has been around since the Roman times, yet because we haven't had it in a decade, it no longer exists as an economic concept. :pac::pac:
Is inflation really dead? - J.P. Morgan Asset Management Inflation is Dead - Wealth Daily Economic Insights: Is inflation dead? | Research | JLL Did Capitalism Kill Inflation? - Bloomberg Why Inflation Is All But Dead - Kiplinger Yardeni: Inflation Dead, Equities Can Return 7% Until 2025 Is Inflation Dead? - Foundation for Economic Education
eagle eye wrote: » We don't know how eager sellers are. If you get 5% a week taking properties off the market for a couple of weeks what happens?
combat14 wrote: » That also depends on how long people are out of work, pay cuts, tax rises, other demand side factors
Ozark707 wrote: » In effect you are suggesting as sellers strike. This of course could happen but I would think it is quite unlikely. Even if supply continues to shrink at the rate you cite there will be some sales and I would contend due to the credit restrictions that it will cause prices to fall. There have already been quite a number of anecdotes on boards of people securing reductions on already agreed prices, what is going to happen where a price has not already been agreed? I know of one person in a chain who is happy to reduce his price if the place he wants to buy will do likewise.
awec wrote: » Imagine right now you are hypothetically looking to buy a house in say, Ranelagh. Next year houses could be 20% cheaper, but there could be next to no houses for sale in Ranelagh. There could be a glut of cheap houses in say Swords.
ittakestwo wrote: » The builders will still have to sell. The dead will also lead to sales. The people most likely not to sell are people trading up or down. But in that case, every less seller will equal one less buyer.
awec wrote: » Sell what?
ittakestwo wrote: » Go on to myhomes and click new homes, thousands of new builds for sale currently.
The_Conductor wrote: » There are currently (as of right now) 548 new homes for sale on Myhome.ie Link here: https://www.myhome.ie/residential/ireland/new-homes/property-for-sale There are in the region of 7,400 properties in various stages of completion nationwide in addition to this (according to the Construction Industry Federation). The supply of new property in the immediate pipeline is more constrained than many people realise.
ittakestwo wrote: » There is 548 developments advertised on myhomes nationwide. One development could be selling over 100 homes.
Hubertj wrote: » So is it 7400 homes in 548 development total?
Ozark707 wrote: » That would mean only about 13 houses per development on average, would seem low?