The Horseman
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If costs outweigh sale price then properties are not built.House prices are based on what the market will stand. House costs are based on input costs. The difference is the profit or loss.
Just about everything else has become cheaper to make over the last 50 years. Why are houses so much more expensive? (and no, it's not because standards are higher). The problem is that the construction sector internationally is dysfunctional. That's been covered in detail elsewhere.
Not by much. Site costs, taxes and charges and the cost of finance are bigger issues and easier to fix. The fact that around 30% of construction materials that are delivered to a construction site end up as waste tells us that the problem is not the cost of materials. Factory built houses generate around 5% waste.
Yes, but higher BER houses produce lower carbon emissions over their lifetime.
The spec of houses has increased significantly over the last 50 yrs and someone has to pay for this increase.
I old enough to remember houses with no bathrooms inside. When we bought our family house in the mid 70's it came with nothing no central heating, no insulation, no garden wall, no shed, a very basic kitchen.
Nowadays properties are very well insulated, have solar panels, on suite bathrooms etc so who how exactly is supposed to pay for all of these?
Site costs, vat, finance costs etc are an issue but there are a number of the reasons our we are where we are. Our eviction laws are non existent. Failure to pay your mortgage or rent has no real consequences. Which is one of the reasons foreign banks are leaving the Irish market. Vat on the price of a house is significant where the purchaser has to include the that as part of the mortgage required. What people fail to realise is that if you lower Vat and other taxes relating to the construction sector this needs to be found elsewhere if you want to maintain social welfare levels and public services.
You can't have both, something needs to give.