Yes, exactly. The cost of owning a house is spread out over the lifetime of the owner rather than just front end loaded.increased property taxes will mean increased costs in owning a house.
Thus house prices drop. Thus mortgages become smaller. The amount of money the average buyer can afford to finance determines the price of houses.This will have an impact on peoples ability to pay as per the banks. Thus, less people will qualify for a mortgage.
The demand will be the same.Thus less demand for property. Thus builders will stop building.
Where did you get €300 for material and labour from? The cost of materials is around €45-€55 per square foot so well under €100k even for a large 4 bed home.If it costs a builder €300,000 in materials to build a house and the demand for the house is there at €250,000 but not €300,000, do you think:
a) the house won't get built
or
b) the house builder will pay out €300,000 in materials and labour etc to build the house and then sell it for €250,000?
No, they mean lower property prices, more trading down, lower mortgages and a broader tax base.Increasing property taxes means increased costs in owning a house and reducing peoples ability to pay.
A decrease in property value is a bad idea. Have you forgotten the whole negative equity of the last bust. Property can create wealth if there was some joined up thinking. Property has a value and can be used as collateral against loans. I am aware of some landlords who use the rent received go into a pension via AVC's. They can't fund AVC's from their wages but use the rental income to fund pensions (in the long term less of a burden on the State when they come to retire as the income they receive in retirement will be subject to tax).The property tax itself would cause a devaluation in the property. That's a good thing. Property doesn't create wealth, in fact it just sucks capital away from the wealth creating parts of the economy.
Why? It's hardly going to add anything to the amount paid on the houses we actually need.
Why? One of the main problems we have is that land prices are way too high. A site value based property tax will depress the value of land. It will also provide more money to fund State home building programmes.
You're an outlier on that one.A decrease in property value is a bad idea.
No. High prices result in high loans and bubbles and negative equity when the wheels come off.Have you forgotten the whole negative equity of the last bust.
Wealth is created through the voluntary exchange of goods and services between people. In the case of a country net wealth is created through the international trade (exchange) of goods and services. High property prices and high returns on property sucks money away from the wealth creating sectors of the economy and so is bad for net wealth creation. It also concentrates wealth in capital and away from labour which is bad for a meritorious society.Property can create wealth if there was some joined up thinking.
Yes, more concentration of wealth in Capital.Property has a value and can be used as collateral against loans. I am aware of some landlords who use the rent received go into a pension via AVC's. They can't fund AVC's from their wages but use the rental income to fund pensions (in the long term less of a burden on the State when they come to retire as the income they receive in retirement will be subject to tax).
I agree with you but I do have a problem with letting a widow or widower live in a three bed council house. I think that the States assets should be used for the greatest social good. That means needs assessments every few years.We need additional supply but also to better utilise the supply we have. How many people in State owned houses are paying a differential rent based on their income which takes no consideration of the size of the property. I don't have an issue with letting a widow or widower living in a three bed council house but basing rent on some arbituary calculation of just income is not fair. It takes no account whatsoever of the unused bedrooms. its akin to saying rent for a one bed should be the same as rent for a three bed just because a person's circumstances have changed (eg kids grow up and move out etc).
The cost of materials is around €45-€55 per square foot so well under €100k even for a large 4 bed home.
Labour is a little less. For a 1300sq/ft house labour and materials are still well under €150k,
When last did you purchase materials? A 1300 sq ft hours well under 150k. You are so out of touch, it's funny.
In fairness to Eoin O'Broin he used to work for Focus Ireland and his view on the topic is a reflection of the extremist ideology common with those who go from college straight into the homelessness industry. They don't even have to take the Che Guevara posters off their bedroom walls.The landlord exodus appears to be accelerating.
Sinn Fein's answer is to ban evictions.Rise in number of termination notices received by RTB
The number of termination notices received by the Residential Tenancies Board in the first half of the year rose by 58%, compared with the latter half of 2021.www.rte.ie
You can chalk that one down auld stockFear of a Shinner government is one of the main factors driving landlords out of the market.
It's a reasonable assumption that AG's advice is that this is not constitutional. I've lost count of the amendments to the RTA since 2015 (four or five) and my feeling is that it would have been introduced it could have.I'm surprised that Sinn Fein aren't pushing for the removal of this ground for terminating a tenancy to bring us in line with the position in the North.
I'm familiar with the caselaw and I don't agree that removing this ground for terminating a tenancy would offend against any constitutional principle or precedent.It's a reasonable assumption that AG's advice is that this is not constitutional.
There was 22,000 fewer rentals from, I think 2016 (there was about 497k rentals) and its been running around 5k reduction per annum since. That's around 1-2% of overall tenancies. Probably not as dramatic as it seems, but the bigger issue that almost no new landlords are entering the market. While there is evidence of vibrant cash buyer activity in the residential market, BTL mortgages make up fewer than 2% of total mortgage draw downs.The landlord exodus appears to be accelerating.
Sinn Fein's answer is to ban evictions.Rise in number of termination notices received by RTB
The number of termination notices received by the Residential Tenancies Board in the first half of the year rose by 58%, compared with the latter half of 2021.www.rte.ie
This is correct. Rules change often several times a year with breathtaking pace. And are not updated in line with better thoughts and experience. For example, the insistence of having a "means of drying clothes" has encouraged provisioning of tumble dryers and washer dryers outdoor drying would be climate friendly.Successive Governments have made changes every 3 and 4 months to rules and regulations for landlords surrounding rental accommodation without addressing the small % of tenants who create issues.
There is competition among the "lefties" to make it more difficult and restrictive for landlords to remain in the market.
It is no wonder that small and medium size landlords are leaving the market.
It is next to impossible for a landlord to keep up with all the pro-tenant regulations mainly designed to protect poor-quality tenants. These types of regulations often have a negative impact on good tenants.
I suspect the fear isn't so much OF a Shinner government as the unpredictability as to how they might behave in power.In fairness to Eoin O'Broin he used to work for Focus Ireland and his view on the topic is a reflection of the extremist ideology common with those who go from college straight into the homelessness industry. They don't even have to take the Che Guevara posters off their bedroom walls.
Fear of a Shinner government is one of the main factors driving landlords out of the market.
Will this remain the case after the constitutional amendment on the right to housing is passed?It's a reasonable assumption that AG's advice is that this is not constitutional. I've lost count of the amendments to the RTA since 2015 (four or five) and my feeling is that it would have been introduced it could have.
The Supreme Court struck down two pieces of rent control legislation in the early 1980s as it felt the Oireachtas was interfering with property rights without adequate justification.
There was no proposal to amend the constitution to weaken the rights of private property owners.Will this remain the case after the constitutional amendment on the right to housing is passed?
There was no proposal to amend the constitution to weaken the rights of private property owners.
This will open a huge can of worms. I am a landlord who is an individual not a company (seperate legal entity in Irish law). Are my property rights (on my rental property) as a individual not the same as on my home?There was no proposal to amend the constitution to weaken the rights of private property owners.
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