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Can you check your workings please? I make it that under the old regime, any non-FTB (including investor) would pay just under €23k on a €700k property, and under the proposed Labour policy, they would pay €33k. Where did you get your figures from?
I don't think that you erred at all. It clear from the policy document that speculators buying multiple properties would gain most financially from Labours stamp duty tax cuts. e.g a speculator buying three houses at €700,000 each would save an extra €69,000
For the record, the truth of Labour's stamp duty policies can be [broken link removed]. The proposal was to eliminate stamp duty for FTBs up to €450k and reduce stamp duty for ALL other purchases, with the highest percentage reductions aimed at purchasers around the 400k mark.
Way off the mark, for many reasons.
1) Purchases are not limited to new houses, so your rants about developers prices are misguided. Market pricing will apply, and 'begin to buy' purchasers will operate in the market along with other purchasers.
2) In parallel with this scheme, Labour committed to meeting the NESF target of 10,000 social housing units, which will take significant demand out of the market at the lower end.3) The cost of the scheme is minimal - the 'interest only' cost of the funds invested, given that the state retains a share in the property. In fact, if there continues to be a modest rise in property prices, the scheme will be self-financing.
4) The local authority can take a view on the value (or otherwise) of the purchase price and can refuse to pay exorbitant prices
5) There is excess capacity available in the market on the supply side, as we are currently building about 20,000 less units this year over last year. This will prevent any inflationary effect.
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Was this before or after Cowen jumped on the bandwagon and offered larger tax cuts than Labour and no cap on stamp duty exemption for FTBs? The words pot, kettle & black spring to mind.
it may be more accurate to say that the money would have been paid over to "property sellers" although the majority of these property sellers would have been developers
quite extraordinary that you are claiming that the cost of the scheme would have been minimal . before the election Pat Rabitte said that it would have cost €2.5 billion.
"Given the political importance of the issue, the Government is likely to attack Labour's plan on the grounds that it will accelerate prices and do nothing to increase the availability of houses.
The €2.5 billion fund would be created from exchequer funds, but it would not come from any existing State fund, such as the National Pension Reserve Fund. "It would be exchequer money," Mr Gilmore told The Irish Times."
[broken link removed]
To say that paying such enourmous amounts of money to house sellers would not distort the market and have a inflationary effect on house prices is not credible. I would argue that FTBs are already allowed to borrow too much with lax control of salary multiples and 100% 40 yr IO mortgages and that many who have bought are already under increasing financial pressure from interest rate hikes and such unforseen events as having kids. To continue to allow them to do so but only for a part of a property is a crazy idea.
To imply that a "modest" rise in house prices would allow FTBs to "release equity" and buy out the govts share is not credible. The only way that it would be self financing is if the govt was able to get FTBs to pay it the extra money that it was giving to property sellers on top of the maximum amount that they could borrow. IMO as FTBs are already stretched to the max this would not have happened.
A sensible policy would have sought to reduce prices for FTBs . To propose to instead do the exact opposite was imo a terrible proposed misuse of taxpayer money.
Most analysts seem to agree that all parties cancelled each other out with auction politics, and the key deciding factor that tilted the balance back to FF in the final week of the campaign was nervousness about the economy.I am not an apologist for Fianna Fail or Biffo. my criticisms of Labour were due to the fact that they were proposing right wing policies and that Labour had in the past been a party of the left. However a few points. Bertie panicked before the Ard Fheis and joined Labour in engaging in auction politics, by which I mean making unrealistic promises about tax cuts and spending increases. However unlike Labour, FF had been in power for 10 yrs at that stage. most sensible people dismissed their promises as electioneering and trusted them to disregard them once the election was over. On the other hand, Labour have not been in power and many were not sure whether they were just lying or whether they would follow through and bankrupt the country ( as Fianna Fail did after engaging in similar auction politics in 77)
Thanks also for clarifying your fundamental lack of understanding of the scheme. The €2.5 billion fund is not the cost of the scheme. For the €2.5 billion that could have been spent on the scheme, the state would have recieved €2.5 billion in residential property. This would of course have been purchased back from the state (at current market values) over time, replenishing the fund. It is really just a matter of moving money around - it is not a real cost.
There is of course a risk if property were to fall in value, but given your certaintly that the scheme would have an inflationary effect, I'm sure you're not going to play that card. I'd love to know that basis of your claim that most such investments would go to developers, and not private sellers - where did you get this from?
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