Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,684
Hi Firefly
We have an assumption that mortgages must be repaid. While it's a good thing to do, there should be no obligation on people who can't do so to repay their mortgage.
If they are paying the interest at market rates (as distinct from tracker rates.) it's sustainable for the borrower and the lender.
So if I have a mortgage from AIB of €200k on a €200k house and I can pay absolutely nothing. The state could pay the €7k a year interest for me.
Everyone wins.
Sorry, the mortgage to let financiers would lose out.
- I keep my house
- AIB has a loan at market rate
- The state pays €7k a year for my housing needs instead of the €12k it would cost them otherwise.
Brendan
So if I have a mortgage from AIB of €200k on a €200k house and I can pay absolutely nothing. The state could pay the €7k a year interest for me.
Everyone wins.
Sorry, the mortgage to let financiers would lose out.
- I keep my house
- AIB has a loan at market rate
- The state pays €7k a year for my housing needs instead of the €12k it would cost them otherwise.
Who or how and when is the principle paid back?
How would that affect the banks ability to loan further if the principle is tied up in this type of scenario?
I think it could still be open to abuse though. I could stop paying my mortgage tomorrow, the tax payer could pay my interest, then in about 20 years time when my house will be worth a lot more I could sell it, pay off the principle and pocket the profit tax free...
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