NoRegretsCoyote
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Which is why the limits should be calibrated as a limit on (stressed) mortgage payments a share of household income.But rates will rise over the next couple of years.
Basic laws of economics do not apply to Irish housing and have not done so for the past 20 or so yearsBasic economic law of supply and demand says it will. If builders think more people will have more money to buy their product, they'll produce more houses.
I don't think rents are relevant.
But don't pretend you're doing that person a favour by imposing artificial rules that "save" them from the (statistically quite small) possibility of incurring imprudent borrowings, at the cost of paying eye-watering rents. Particularly if your real aim is to actually protect the banks from imprudent lending!One of the arguments made in this thread and made by many commentators is that it is cheaper for someone to buy a house with a 90% mortgage and 4 1/2 times income than to pay rents.
So it's a point that has to be challenged.
Brendan
But don't pretend you're doing that person a favour by imposing artificial rules that "save" them from the (statistically quite small) possibility of incurring imprudent borrowings, at the cost of paying eye-watering rents. Particularly if your real aim is to actually protect the banks from imprudent lending!
People can sustain higher rents than mortgage payments. If their income changes they can move to something within their means and the landlord can find another tenant. There is no system-wide financial stability issue here.One of the arguments made in this thread and made by many commentators is that it is cheaper for someone to buy a house with a 90% mortgage and 4 1/2 times income than to pay rents.
The ratio of debt to disposable income of Irish households was 209% at the end of 2009.the last thing you do in that scenario is run that company with financial leverage.
That makes perfect sense. So no need for Central back rent rules but put the same person in a mortgaged house and they can't downsize in the same manor hence the need for the mortgage rules.People can sustain higher rents than mortgage payments. If their income changes they can move to something within their means and the landlord can find another tenant. There is no system-wide financial stability issue here.
Take the UK for example, it is a bigger economy, it has it's own monetary policy this helps to reduce the shocks faced by households so they can have relatively less conservative rules.Back to the rules, many EU member states have a rule something like stressed total debt repayments should not exceed 40% of income. The Irish rules are equivalent to something more like 25%-35%, which in my view is excessively prudent. The UK uses an LTI approach and has a limit a lot higher of 4.5 despite retail interest rates about the same.
lower buildings costs would be another option - but don't leverage up the domestic financial system itself again.
That’s certainly a possibility but there was also the possibility of rate rises back in 2015 - we only know that rates actually fell with the benefit of hindsight.Hi Sarenco
But rates will rise over the next couple of years.
And they realise how high house prices are and that looser lending will just push up prices.
Brendan
"Look over there!"The right approach is to bring down the cost of developing new houses.
Would it though?On the demand side there is literally a policy lever that the Central Bank can pull tomorrow that would lead to a material increase in housebuilding without compromising financial stability.
Why would that prompt a further supply response? Demand is outstripping supply at present. There's no shortage of buyers and supply shouldn't be constrained by this.MO the Central Bank should have moved to an LTI ratio of 4 to reflect the lower cost of credit. That would prompt a further supply response and would help to take some of the heat out of the rental market.
Because if more people can actually buy homes, developers will build more homes to meet that demand.Why would that prompt a further supply response?
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