T McGibney
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I have already suggested to you an alternative to current system in another thread.
One where the State delivers the housing stock of affordable priced homes and where property management tender to provide quality accommodation at competitive prices - providing tenants and prospective owners a real option between rental v ownership.
How many houses did the Land Commission ever build? When did they last build one? How do the economics of Victorian housebuilding compare to those of today? You might as well be calling for the return to Brian Boru or the Tuatha Dé Danann to build houses.The only reason I used the land commission is the annunity system they used worked where the land commission built houses ,
A system like the old land commission for housing would get over the under building problem and take the problem away from the local vested interests for good,
Planning for new housing should reflect the wages paid for work and the people who do this work in each local area first,
Leaving the poilitical lackys and hanger on to one side for now, My views on the political system operated by FF?FG and Labour seeing close up is rotten to the core this is the reason I use the FF?FG, and FG?FF all the time,Except the Land Commission didn't work. It robbed land off widows whose husbands had died on the grounds that they wouldn't be able to "farm properly" Their children ended up destitute as the derisory compensation they received was gobbled up by inflation. The Land Commission handed this land to political lackeys and hangers-on. Political corruption at its worst.
Take a look at the annuty system used before the foundation of this state set up by the British the people who brought it in were far from socialist in there out look and see did a system work already in Ireland which was set up to solve problems close to the housing problem of today,
How much would this cost? Again, 100,000 homes built at €250k each would cost €25 billion - which the State doesn't have - and only knock a dent in the housing shortage.
The ESRI predicts that we will need to build 30,-35,000 houses a year over next decade.
https://www.irishtimes.com/business...e-prices-does-not-signal-new-bubble-1.3128452
Yes it's indeed debatable. The real figure would probably be higher, because as you say....Furthermore, your €250,000 figure is debatable given the ownership of land by the State in the first place.
Nevertheless, an injection of a €7.5bn building programme, or even half that could overheat the economy.
Quite the contradiction there.So the State should measure its capacity to deliver housing, and then the type of housing it wants to deliver - typically 2/3 bed townhouses and apartments.
....
The State will receive a steady income stream, off-setting over a long period of time, the build cost.
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The State will insure the property management for non-payment of rent where the tenant is shown to be in financial difficulties and unable to pay.
Ok, tells us how it worked and how it differed from the public housing schemes of the 1940s, 50s and 60s.
The problem as I see it with all those schemes relative to today is that the economics of the old days no longer apply. Back in the day, a council or public authority could build a house for half nothing because of the availability of labour at rates so cheap that they approximated to slave labour.
Even in the 1950s and 1960s, the first task in building a house was to have the labourers build the blocks. This meant that, as the other inputs didn't cost a whole pile, the overall build cost was tiny.
Today, new build houses and apartments are extremely expensive and the only way to finance this is to charge rents that by the standards of the old days are eye-watering.
The solutions of the 1900s or 1940s are not the solutions we need now.
To give you an example i know a house which the council bought to be honest I know the people who sold it to them the council spent over 200000 euro before turning it over to the tenant I would say if we had an dare I say the word a land commission type annuity system I suspect the tenants would be a lot happier to take the house as it was and upgrade it them self over time provided the retained the value added I would say if the spent 20% over time of what the council spent the would be happier with the results and would regard as there real home,
Quite the contradiction there.
You've mentioned before about how State housing would pay for itself over 100 years but you've so far failed to address my key point that the cost of financing a €250k house or apartment (or even a €150k house or apartment) over such a long timeframe is economically ruinous owning to the long term cumulative cost of capital and the necessity for heavy expenditure on maintenance costs, especially after the first decade or two.
Back to post no 24This post will be deleted if not edited immediately, What happened to this thread.
How so?
The houses will be occupied primarily by working people at affordable rental prices. If a tenant has the ability to pay but refuses there will consequences for them (typically fines that are a multiple of the rent due plus legal costs).
If this were true, and/or as significant as you suggest, public housing should be a goldmine for the State. But it's not, instead it's a money pit. Doesn't that suggest something?I don't see how. Houses built by the State in 1950-1960's cost about equivalent €5-€10000.
A local authority tenant, average annual rent paid is circa €3,000 pa today.
Who will pay the property management company's bills?As for maintenance, the maintenance will be managed by the property management company, fixtures and fittings, furnishings, service lifts, etc.
There is a lot more to property maintenance than remedying structural defectsStructural defects to be insured by the State.
It would seem perverse,to a non landlord,that with rents at the highest level ever achieved since the foundation of the state,that you are leaving this business.
If it was profitable when you started the investment(and surely it was) then it must be super profitable now.
I think the underlying problem is Landlords are paying USC and PRSI which they have not being paying in the past I think the level of tax is also a big factor,This is what I am thinking too.
Rents have never been higher..
Demand has never been greater..
Interest rates have never been lower..
It seems to be teed up for landlords. So why are so many leaving the market & turning to Airbnb?
Given the horror stories I keep hearing regarding tenants not paying rent and the rigmarole involved in removing them, I suspect that the pendulum has swung too far in the tenant's favour.
By all means, tenants should be protected, however as with renting any other type of asset, anyone not paying rent should lose their entitlement to use the asset (be evicted) and anyone wrecking a place should be easily prosecuted.
It was Coveney who introduced the rent cap with the backing of cabinet and FF.
Murphy is completely out of his depth and should never have been given that portfolio by Varadkar.
This is a collective failure of FG & FF.
FF wanted 2%, not 4% cap on increases:
http://www.thejournal.ie/homeless-crisis-4-rents-3138632-Dec2016/
Just in case anyone thinks the main alternative would be any better!
The Land Commission. Bless. One of the biggest rackets in the history of the State where private property was forcibly confiscated from its lawful owners and reappropriated to lackeys of the ruling political parties.
Thankfully no modern Supreme Court would for an instant tolerate its abuse of process and contempt for private property rights.
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