Affable wrote: » Doesn't something need to be done about this dispiriting situation?
Sherifu wrote: » Is it that bad in England?
gcgirl wrote: » House share is the answer !
Affable wrote: » Isn't it rather discouraging for young students/graduates about the improbability of finding a decent independent lifestyle after uni? Even if you work really hard, you then need more experience, plus graduate jobs are at a rate where you can't afford to buy or even rent in many cases. Doesn't something need to be done about this dispiriting situation?
jimmycrackcorm wrote: » The generation that thinks life owes them doth speaketh up.
Affable wrote: » I don't know, it WAS in fact easier for past generations to buy houses actually.
leninbenjamin wrote: » actually the generation before me tells me there was exactly no difference. as a proportion of income the mortgages were still as high. that 2.5 rule kept prices artificially low, but the consequence was massive interest rates.
gcgirl wrote: » Go travel see the world then when you come back the house market will have fell through and you'll be able to pick up a house for little or nothing just like the 80's :rolleyes:
Archimedes wrote: » Dont worry, Im an economist in training. Ill have it all sorted out in a few years.
astraboy wrote: » On a personal note, I found some of the Grad offer's wages in Ireland insulting to be honest. How people could have a half decent time in Dublin on those wages I don't know.
seamus wrote: » What more do you want?
seamus wrote: » Ah students. Listen, you may spend 4, 5 or 10 years in college, buts that's no guarantee of a €50k paycheque, an office and a secretary when you leave. It's the rare few that land on their feet straight out of college, but for some reason students think that they deserve the same treatment. I've been there. Most of you will have to drop into a job paying less than you think you deserve, which gives you good experience, but no guaranteed career. Accept this, most of us have had to do it. Your degree will stand to you a couple of years after leaving college, not immediately when you graduate. If you get €25k straight out of college, be happy. That's more than enough money to share a house with two mates in Dublin, party 3 or four nights a week and go on a cheap sun holiday every year. What more do you want?
I don't know, it WAS in fact easier for past generations to buy houses actually.
Moonbaby wrote: » Rents are actualy going up because of the credit crunch. Grad salaries are grand in my field. I'll probably qualify for a mortgage after a year.
Ross_Mahon wrote: » Yeah sure lots of the suburban areas like Tallaght and Clondalkin houses were really cheap back then, they were made to put knackers like me into! :pac: The houses are worth far more now with the development going on everywhere.
Blisterman wrote: » What happens to all the people who were going to buy a house, but are now holding on for a couple of years, for house prices to drop? They rent, thereby increasing the demand for rented properties.
Blisterman wrote: » I guess it depends on the area. I know, in Central London, house prices have dropped in the past year, while rents have increased by quite a lot.