errlloyd wrote: » Random one. But does anyone remember much about Dublin in the 80s? I ask for a specific reason. I'm at that age where all of my friends talk about mortgages and house prices. And of course the conversation always turns to "our parents got their 7 bed d4 mansion for free by collecting 5 coupons on their breakfast cereal" (or some other variation of that). Usually then we talk about interest rates, and stuff. But generally we all go away from those conversations feeling a mixture of depression, self pity, and existential dread. But I guess I'm beginning to think that the true thing being missed when we look back at the 80s is just that no wanted to live here. Immigration was non existent, emigration was sky high. The rugby wasn't great, the soccer was awful, curry chips was an ethnic culinary experimentation, it was illegal to be gay, a large amount of the island was a warzone, and films were genuinely getting censored by the church. And the weather sucks. Laced between a few hyperboles there is an honest question. Should we (millennials) resent our parents generation for getting rich off property. Or should we respect them for being willing to set down roots, and invest in living in this hell hole?
Former Former Former wrote: » The problem is the fixation on one aspect of life in these comparisons, i.e. buying houses. So even if it was easier to buy a nice house in a good area, there was a whole lot of other ****e in the 80s and even the early 90s that made Ireland a very grim place to be, e.g. - massive unemployment - massive emigration - unimaginable rates of taxation on those who did have a job - 65% PAYE I think? - interest rates and inflation that would melt down the global economy today - the general overall state of the place I laugh at millennials on twitter who think that people who came into the workforce and bought houses in the 70s and 80s "won the lottery" being the age they are. Did they f**k. Edit: and of course the Troubles. And near-constant industrial unrest. And the fact that you couldn't divorce, it was a crime to be gay, abortions lol and you couldn't even buy a condom until 1985.
errlloyd wrote: » Right ^^ kinda echoing what both of you are saying above. Objectively property was cheaper in the 1980s. It was very cheap. I know my dad got hit by an interest rate hike that overnight meant his mortgage jumped to more than his entire take-home pay, but on the other hand he was still rocking a 20 year mortage for a single income family. But there were **** all opportunities, the social situation wasn't great, a lot of the property was pretty crappy. But from 81-94 there wasn't net immigration once in Irish history. House prices are influenced by the levers of fiscal policy - for sure. But the main driver is simple supply and demand. Is it fair to say there was way less demand because Dublin wasn't a very desirable place to live?
stephen_n wrote: » There was also a lot more supply. In terms of council houses. The decision to stop building council houses and sell off existing stocks. Had a huge impact on the housing market here. Where as massive council estates brought social issues. They also brought a lot of stability to the housing market. Which has helped drive prices up. The idea that market would provide, is a lie. It hasn’t here and it didn’t anywhere else.
Former Former Former wrote: » Well, yes and no. It's only ten years since we had a massive oversupply of privately built houses. We thought we would never need so many and they'd have to be bulldozed and returned to agriculture. The market will always try to meet demand. The problem is ramping up that supply takes years. The Celtic Tiger construction boom also had the luxury of a basically endless supply of labour from the new EU countries. That is no longer the case. From friends in the construction industry, there is a huge shortage of skilled labour and a huge shortage of raw materials, so simply saying "let's build 50,000 houses" isn't going to happen overnight, or even in the next 5 years. Finally, the local authorities haven't built meaningful numbers of houses in 30 years. That means that any knowledge around how to do it has been lost, so even if they have the land and the money, your local council probably hasn't a breeze what to do next. That's why leasing ready-to-go houses from the private sector is so attractive; it's not cost-effective but it's low-risk and it's quick. TLDR: be very suspicious of any politician, from whatever party, who says they can fix the housing issue in anything less than 10 years. They absolutely cannot.
Deleted User wrote: » 46 windows?
jacothelad wrote: » Yep. Most 6 feet tall and 3 feet wide sash windows. There were also four entrance doors and the front one was 4 feet wide and 7 feet in height which led to a vestibule with a similar sized interior door. It cost a small fortune to replace them. The front one had to be mahogany as it was a conservation area. The house at one time had been used as a small hotel, part of it was a cafe for a while, then a gents barbers and in the 1950s the rear walled garden that we made had actually been used as a chip shop. Here is the front elevation which has 20 windows in all. I really loved the house but it went through heating oil like a WW1 battleship..:D
swiwi_ wrote: » Is that a house or a castle?
molloyjh wrote: » I know from talking to a lot of friends that many of our parents went through incredibly difficult times in their relationships because of things like rate increases. Some of the rows we'd hear were....memorable. My parents at one stage were paying over 18% on their mortgage. Sure, it was probably easier to get one. But paying for it and affording all the other basics was a constant struggle. Foreign holidays? Pure fantasy. We were lucky to get any kind of holiday at all unless we knew someone who had a house or a caravan that we could use for a week. The second hand clothes and toys from family in America was commonplace. Theres so many things that people today take for granted that were sources of major stress in the 80s. It nearly broke my parents. The 80s were a grim, grim time in Ireland.
mfceiling wrote: » Only had this conversation with the brother recently. We never went hungry and I can relate to passing down the clothes to the younger brothers. The mother was (still is) a legendary budgeter!! We never seemed to be under pressure for anything be it going back to school or when Santa visited. It's unimaginable to be paying 18% mortgage rates. I've a rental property up north on a tracker and it's something ridiculous like 0.8% or something mad like that!!
awec wrote: » Got a phone call out of the blue from GP to get the vaccine tomorrow!
molloyjh wrote: » You lucky fecker! The number of people I know now who are vaccinated is really shooting up. I remain firmly optimistic on a return to the RDS by September.