Nothing Personal my you-know-what! - Right! Let's line up everybody over 55 who owns his/her home and issue them with the following:-
1. You own your home which is too big for you, according to us, You have no say whatsoever and we're turfing you out to make way for somebody who doesn't own his/her own home.
2. You can go and live in a smaller home of our decision where you should be delighted in making way for the new crop of upwardly mobile individuals.
3. If you decided not to vacate, your property tax will increase by 500%.
4. Please Mr Leper, no arguments, just relax and get out now!
I didn't qualify for a grant for our first home, applying for local authority housing was out of the question and also the same for a local authority loan, our bank kept us on 12 months bridging loan before the mortgage was made available to us thereby increasing our repayments by one year, and then we had to contend with interest rates of up to 19.75%, Mrs Lep was obliged to give up work on marriage (Public Service Decree), our offspring didn't qualify for 3rd Level Grants because of my income, I'm still awaiting my 2nd Covid AZ Vaccine while everybody I know (younger and older than me) is fully vaccinated for several weeks. You see, these people would be moaning to their elected representatives if they weren't winning at bingo. Why should I complain about being turfed out of the home we paid dearly for?
You have no say whatsoever and we're turfing you out
I am enjoying my retirement it was well earned when I started out working income tax was around twice as high as it is today I retired,I think you just illustrated why our TDs are so scared of annoying the older voter!
No-one is suggesting 'turfing you out'. You inferred that all by yourself.
The only thing that is in the back of my mind is if the government would allow me sell my home now and gift some of the equity proceeds to my children tax free. This would be in addition to the inheritance threshold
I think government could look at this and try to make it easier in terms of planning to build an annex on to houses whereby you could have multi generational family units. Things like square footage exemptions, development levies exemptions would help free up properties. It could also mean older people don't have to go to nursing homes as they have family nearby to care for them.Intuitively, it is something that makes sense.
- We form family units, we have children - we live in a big house
- Those children grow up, they leave the big house the big house now only has two people living in it.
- Those children start having children themselves, they need a big house - but many of the existing stock of big houses are occupied by their parent's generation
From a resourcing perspective, it is highly inefficient to have small older family units (of 1 or 2 people) living in these big houses while younger families are searching for suitable housing themselves.
The trick (which our government appears to have missed) would appear to be a strategy that would encourage older people to sell their big houses (if they want to!) and downsize to suitable smaller units that are optimised for older people.
If we could solve this one, it would free up a lot of family houses for actual families that need them - and house older people in units suitable to their needs.
I can't see our government ever tackling this but it does seem to me to be one of the great unspoken debates in our housing crisis...I wonder what they do in other countries?
How about 66% benefit in kind tax on the employer contributions section of all pensions including lump sum at drawdown and reinvest it in building extra homes, the real problem is a shortage of new buildsNoone is turfing anyone out. But public policy should be about public good.
. If you are paying €600 and it rose to €6000 then you and Mrs. Leper are well capable of making a rational choice on whether to stay or move to somewhere with a lower rating (or attaching the charge to the house if you are unable to pay). Out of say every 1000 Leper households if 500 decided to move this would result in a greatly increase supply of family homes in a location desired by, and suitable for, the active workforce (and assuming this applies to your location). If this results in a decrease in the numbers commuting long distances so much the better. Better to tax in this way than simply to lump on income tax. Maybe reduce it instead. (Anyway, I bet you would be much more contented in lovely Manorhamilton anyway - you just needed the nudge)
But as mentioned by another poster, it is very unlikely to happen. Everyone likes to to moan about services, planning, housing, traffic, etc etc. but few see themselves being involved in the problem never mind the solution. And damn any politicwho suggests otherwise.
Is a red herring the correct term for this? And is the real problem the shortage of new builds - or is there considerably more to it than that? What about best use of existing housing stock? What about suitability of housing to changing needs? What about affordability of housing and house price inflation? What about location of housing? The availability of land? What about commuting and congestion? What about the burden of taxation between property and earned income? What about conflating home ownership with property investment?How about 66% benefit in kind tax on the employer contributions section of all pensions including lump sum at drawdown and reinvest it in building extra homes, the real problem is a shortage of new builds
we could try out the benefit in kind on the pensions of those who suggesting increasingLPT,
And I can enjoy my house my well-earned pension and my retirement,If changes to pensions can contribute to good housing policy and the public good then by all means it should be looked at. Otherwise it is a separate matter and kept under review in its own right.
Anyway, I think we have drifted too far from the thread topic. I'll leave off - and enjoy my pension!
Can you expand on this. I am not sure what you mean.Another suggestion is to look at allowing the proceeds of sale of family homes be exempt from inheritance tax threshold for a period of 3 to 5 years therefore increasing supply.
I think it's incentivizing selling the parents home as opposed to retaining it.Can you expand on this. I am not sure what you mean.
If the older owner has died, let's say the proceeds go to the children........how will this action increase supply?
But you would not be thrown out. A rise in LPT all around (not just on the Leper household or on the over 60s, etc) would in my opinion, encourage a better use of the housing stock. If you are paying €600 and it rose to €6000 then you and Mrs. Leper are well capable of making a rational choice on whether to stay or move to
I am approaching 70 years. I took early retirement in my 50's. I have spent 20 years travelling, pottering about the house and garden. Keeping in touch with family, grand children. Not big drinkers, no fancy restaurants, modest cars, not interested in clothes or bling. Live in coastal south Dublin. Have everything on my doorstep. Not good at DIY. Large house.is there a big difference between 60 and 65 in terms of energy, concentration etc,
build more houses to match the average industrial wage, CSO Figures published 6 June 2020 show more than 400000 jobs were created in the Irish economy between 2014 and 2020 some of these extra job holders would now be in the market looking for houses,Would that not only work if the LPT was levied against particular age groups? If it rose from 600 to 6,000 for all then arguably people with young families would be put under more financial pressure than empty nesters who have fewer outgoings.
I've seen property tax used as a means to gentrify neighbourhoods in the US. Low income families unable to sustain the tax due to house price increases, forced to sell. Due to higher house prices only certain percentage of the population can afford to buy in the area, pushing lower incomes families out further or to less desirable areas.
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