zuma wrote: This is the same as: Which came first the chicken or the egg!
Commander Vimes wrote: quite clearly the egg came first.
sinecurea wrote: Then what gave birth to the egg? I think the chicken came first, then the egg-birth developed later as a better way of doing things.
FillSpectre wrote: A reptile layed the egg as they evolved from them. It was at one point a theoretical debate now it is not as we know.
jetsonx wrote: Do you find it funny that people who complain about the price of living in Ireland are the exact same people who will demand a wage increase? (wage increases being a root cause of inflation)
TempestSabre wrote: I think you be careful when talking about earning more money with having a higher standard of living. Its not just about the cost of beer! For many its a case of needing to work more hours to pay for rent/mortgage, food, light, heat, electricity, clothing creche etc. Thus having less leisure time than ever before. We have massive traffic congestion, terrible health services and high levels of debt. I would say its not as nice a place to live as it use to be.
FillSpectre wrote: Along with the people forced out of Dublin stories etc... Not one person who has these problems I hear in the media.
eoin_s wrote: Are you saying that you don't believe that a lot of people who were brought up in Dublin can't afford to live in Dublin?
FillSpectre wrote: No, I am saying they weren't forced out they made choices. As far as I can tell people go with what their money will buy not what they need. I believe people can buy in Dublin but they would prefer a larger house and a long commute than a house that suits their needs and a short commute. It's choice not a hardship forced upon them. I can only go with those I know and that is what they feel. My mother refers to friends outside Dublin as those forced out yet my friends say they decided to live there. They can't both be right and I'll go with those who made the decision:)
eoin_s wrote: Well, if you want to be black and white about it, then you are correct - a married couple with no children only need a one bed apartment.
eoin_s wrote: The very cheapest house (funnily enough, a 1 bed apartment) in Dublin I could find on Daft was for €315,000. I know an awful lot of people - and couples - who couldn't afford that type of mortgage.
ronoc wrote: Yes you are hitting the nail on the head. To be honest a minimum wage is counter productive in our current environment. Especially one as high as ours.
dermo88 wrote: Too much of the Irish economy is leveraged on the property market. It will drop, and fall in both real and nominal terms over the next few years, starting from the outer Leinster counties first.
FillSpectre wrote: ....I hear people say things like working more hours for mortgage and rent etc... I have never met somebody in these situations maybe I just am out of touch with all these people but nobody I know knows them either. Along with the people forced out of Dublin stories etc... Not one person who has these problems I hear in the media. Or health service isn't that bad or our traffic. It isn't the same as it was that is about all....
jetsonx wrote: Do you find it funny that people who complain about the price of living in Ireland are the exact same people who will demand a wage increase?
jetsonx wrote: (wage increases being a root cause of inflation)
TempestSabre wrote: I can only agree with you (and the people you know) are very much out of touch with reality of modern irish life, in Dublin at least.
Stephen wrote: I hope the arse falls out of the house market at some stage in the near future, it would be nice to afford somewhere to live without requiring a mortgage for 40+ years.
FillSpectre wrote: ....Along with the people forced out of Dublin stories etc... .... health service isn't that bad or our traffic. ...
“It is a fact that this city can no longer continue to take the densities that are being forced on it, like the population and traffic pressures...“Without the Government responding to try to move people, we’re having day in and day out, people commuting enormous distances to this city.
FillSpectre wrote: Maybe you are only in touch with people in that situation and think the people who aren't in the situation don't exist. ... I don't know how we are so out of touch modern Irish life what age are all the people you know having such a hard time? I know nobody unemployed and forced to work in dire conditions except a guard and a nurse and they have some nice perks that off set them. I still think it is media hype.....I have heard many stories of I can't afford to live in Dublin and then hear it is a single person trying to buy a 3 bed house so I don't think it matters. THe head line will read Dublin Teacher can't Afford House"
TempestSabre wrote: From the Dail yesterday. Taoiseach Bertie Ahern “It is a fact that this city can no longer continue to take the densities that are being forced on it, like the population and traffic pressures...“Without the Government responding to try to move people, we’re having day in and day out, people commuting enormous distances to this city. So you reckon hes making it up then? Or the queues on the M50 stretching for miles don't exist? Or that the stories about people on trollies in Emergency rooms aren't true, or people waiting for operations aren't true? I'd quote some paper articles from this week, but you don't believe the press.
TempestSabre wrote: I never said there were people who aren't in that situation. That would be silly. I said there ARE people in that situation. I would suggest that 100%, and 40yr mortgages are a sign that people are struggling. Also the massive increases in the money spent on subsidised housing. Not to mention the increases in personal debt.
sinecurea wrote: Then what gave birth to the egg?
sinecurea wrote: I think the chicken came first, then the egg-birth developed later as a better way of doing things.