presidenttttt
Registered User
- Messages
- 390
Of course the vulture funds need an incentive but we equally have to factor the human side here.
When you go to jail as a punishment for a crime you get an end date, you have opportunity to get out for good behaviour, and the period is relatively short for the majority of crimes - you, if you are a good citizen, can get on with your life.
The current setup for vulture fund mortgages, as I understand it, condemns people to maybe 15-20 years of super high interest rate mortgages. Many of them will have already been extended at 3-4% mortgages. The situation I imagine to be suffocating, potentially life/family destroying and grossly unfair, and certainly does not help people to prosper - which in the end likely creates more cost downstream for the state. I know many responsible people in relatively good financial health and intelligence who would not be able to withstand excessive mortgage rates long-term.
Plenty of the big boys in NAMA have been allowed a path back to success, and indeed the same names are owning some of Dublin's biggest developments and sites again....suffocating a family into some sort of purgatory feels wrong. They may well be living beside someone getting the same house for next to nothing from the government too. Different topic, but that makes no sense.
When you go to jail as a punishment for a crime you get an end date, you have opportunity to get out for good behaviour, and the period is relatively short for the majority of crimes - you, if you are a good citizen, can get on with your life.
The current setup for vulture fund mortgages, as I understand it, condemns people to maybe 15-20 years of super high interest rate mortgages. Many of them will have already been extended at 3-4% mortgages. The situation I imagine to be suffocating, potentially life/family destroying and grossly unfair, and certainly does not help people to prosper - which in the end likely creates more cost downstream for the state. I know many responsible people in relatively good financial health and intelligence who would not be able to withstand excessive mortgage rates long-term.
Plenty of the big boys in NAMA have been allowed a path back to success, and indeed the same names are owning some of Dublin's biggest developments and sites again....suffocating a family into some sort of purgatory feels wrong. They may well be living beside someone getting the same house for next to nothing from the government too. Different topic, but that makes no sense.