My understanding of securitisation is that the mortgages remain on the bank´s or building society´s books, but the future cash flows generated by the portfolio go to the overseas entity.sonar said:What does this say about risk of repossesions in a downturn given that it
is an overseas entity that holds the rights to an Irish mortgage portfolio?
The only thing contributing to house price inflation is the mania of Irish buyers. There is no scarcity of houses and no scarcity of land.Ipso_facto said:Well obviously they ( continual influx of temporary overseas workers ) contribute to inflation in - housing and the rental sector.
Energy costs are rising because the cost of generating that energy is rising. Ireland's consumption of oil and gas is miniscule in world terms so a reduction in our demand would have little global effect. Business energy costs are priced differently to residential energy costs and in the electricity sector, businesses appear to subsidise consumers.Ipso_facto said:But i was mainly suggesting companies like Intel or pharmacuitical Co.for example, have enormous energy needs and extra demands on the water supply ...etc, Hence - recent increases to the consumer here, and more to come in the future ( are businesses paying their fair share or even the true cost of utilities ) Maybe Gov. departments should take a closer look at some Co. in the Industry sector ..etc
edo said:.......We should have come up with serious financial incentives for capitalists and entrepreneurs to invest in High tech and environmental tech , which will be next big thing , and make Ireland the inventor as opposed to the hired labour in the technology game. We should have invested the resources and more importantly the brain power in developing proper infrastructure for the country .......
Well other countries , primarily our ever so sensible and long term thinking Scandanavian cousins have done precisely what i've outlined above ......
Duplex said:You mention environmental technology as a area that Ireland should consider exploiting, I agree wholeheartedly. Wind turbine technology for instance, we are the best place on Earth in which to generate power from wind, now that we are building all these new houses we could make it a requirement that all new homes have a micro turbine fitted at construction, developing a domestic market and reducing or need to import energy. Government could offer some type of incentive to encourage wind turbine r&d, manufacture etc.
Many years ago this was a thriving, happy planet - people, cities, shops, a normal world. Except that on the high streets of these cities there were slightly more shoe shops than one might have thought necessary. And slowly, insidiously, the number of the shoe shops were increasing. It's a well-known economic phenomenon but tragic to see it in operation, for the more shoe shops there were, the more shoes they had to make and the worse and more unwearable they became. And the worse they were to wear, the more people had to buy to keep themselves shod, and the more the shops proliferated, until the whole economy of the place passed what I believe is termed the Shoe Event Horizon, and it became no longer economically possible to build anything other than shoe shops. Result - collapse, ruin and famine. Most of the population died out. Those few who had the right kind of genetic instability mutated into birds who cursed their feet, cursed the ground and vowed that no one should walk on it again. -- Douglas Adams, The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
edo said:Well other countries , primarily our ever so sensible and long term thinking Scandanavian cousins have done precisely what i've outlined above - What have we done ?- pissed it all away on a consumption spurge, an inefficient and unreformed public service and the least benefical of all "investments" - property
Askar said:What availability does a micro turbine in an urban estate have? What do you do on a cold winters night when no wind is blowing, and you need light and heating?
As a conventional turbine in a good wind area will do well to achieve 40% availability (whereas a modern combined cycle gas turbine will have a 90% availability), I think all these fuzzy green notions need to be exposed
Askar said:What availability does a micro turbine in an urban estate have? What do you do on a cold winters night when no wind is blowing, and you need light and heating?
As a conventional turbine in a good wind area will do well to achieve 40% availability (whereas a modern combined cycle gas turbine will have a 90% availability), I think all these fuzzy green notions need to be exposed, just like the concept of moving up the value added chain. Are the engineers and scientist graduating in vast numbers from the low cost economies in China and India less intelligent than Irish graduates? Are Asians less Entrepeneurial and hard working than the Irish? Edo, I think you have answered the last question.
joe sod said:I would hate to be someone leaving school in ireland now. Everything looks so rosy to them but I think they will get it very hard.
joe sod said:Excellent post Edo its not often you see someone going to the effort of posting such a thought provoking article. Its also unique to hear from someone who is really at the coalface of the irish economy. I would hate to be someone leaving school in ireland now. Everything looks so rosy to them but I think they will get it very hard.
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