D
the larger developers couldn't have justified increasing their land bank.
modest 3 bed semi-Ds costing 50,000-60000 to build
effectively the government is giving a grant
of perhaps 100,000 euro (roughly the cost of a
site) per head to a small segment of the population.
They could sell the land and just hand
out the 100 grand directly to the first time buyers
I can see the
advertisement now - "invitation to tender to build
houses but you're not allowed to make a profit".
What if you're on 35k a year? Why should someone on slightly less salary than you receive a bounty of a 100 grand from the government?. It would be worth your while to
ask for a pay cut in work.
In any case, no matter
what happens the scheme will be oversubscribed and
so effectively some sort of lottery will have to
take place. How is it going to feel to lose in this
lottery while seeing friends or acquaintances win?
the 10000 houses will not increase the
overall supply but instead will just divert
resources from existing building
Regardless of restrictions on selling the houses within 5 years,
I understood (though I didn't see anything definitive on this) that a longer term of restriction (e.g. 15-20 years) was planned
There is no proposal to restrict/eliminate the profit
made by builders when building. The proposal is designed
to eliminate the windfall, non-value-add profit made by
developers/landowners. This is the major contributing
factor in our house price problem.
There need not be any such restriction on the tender.
Simple market economics will apply, i.e. the guy who
gives the lowest quote (subject to meeting
quality/legal/tax criteria) will get the tender. Given
that the monopoly of Irish commercial builders has been
broken by foreign entrants over the past few years, I
have no reason to expect that this won't be a real
competition, getting value for the buyers.
How can you say that the people who fail to secure aAgain, this is not a good reason for not proceeding with
the scheme, just because it might hurt the feelings of
those who don't get a house. They will be no worse off
than they are today.
Indeed, they will probably be better off as there will
10,000 less buyers competing for the normal FTB houses,
so this will inevitably result in price drops or
levelling out.
a scheme which offers massive rewards to a select number of lucky people stinks.
This is contradictory.
Why would any builder bid for
the tender if there is "non-value-add profit" (a new
term for me) to be had by developing and selling houses
themselves?
You tell me what the difference is between this scheme
and an alternative where the government sells the land
at market value and hands out hundred grand grants to a
select few to buy on the open market?
Do you
think government resources are infinite? The government
is proposing to dispose of some very valuable assets
which are owned by everyone but give the benefits of the
disposal to a very tiny few.
Sure and this extra building capacity will appear out of
nowhere.
Just like any private housing estate then.you don't get to choose the type of neighbour you get
Just like many FTB's today, who are unable to get a house in the locality they currently live. Or to be more specific, they are unable to get a house in the province in which they currently live.you may not get to choose the locality either.
I presume that if you have any real evidence that any county council workers get special treatment under current systems that you report it to the authorities. The days when these kinds of abuses can run free are gone. I really don't believe that kind of stuff will still happen.you'll find county council workers magically ending up in certain houses that you wouldn't think they'd be entitled to
That really depends on how the tender competition for building the houses is managed.No, the real dosh is going to be made by those who build the houses
Servicing of land isn't really the bottleneck. Supply of land is the problem. The building land in Dublin is in the hands of the developers, who currently eek out just enough each year to keep them in helicoptors. Servicing the land will do nothing to help house prices.The land should have been sold and part of that money used to service the thousands of acres of land around Dublin already available to build on.
Great - tell him to put in a tender for the affordable houses and he's sure to win. That's assuming you are not referring to a 'direct labour' price (aka price for cash, aka tax evading tradesmen) which would explain 42% of the reduction from the normal price.I know someone who recently built a modest house, site excluded for not much more than 50,000.
I have enough evidence to lead me to believe that the way some of the houses in the affordable housing scheme are given out is slightly iffy
and who says all the big developers pay their tax liabilities.
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