SidTheDweeb
Registered User
- Messages
- 99
All those first time buyers salivating about dropping prices should also realise that they won't be getting much of a mortgage if they have no job, which becomes increasingly likely as you have a stalemate which is reducing both employment and tax take like you have now.
Sure, house prices would be great if they dropped another 20% for the FTB, but at what cost. 10%+ unemployment could be the price that has to be paid.
It is wrong that so much of the economy got centred around the building boom, but like it or lump it, it was up to 25% of our economy and as that contracts, you will see serious cutbacks and spill over effects into areas of the economy you didn’t realize would be impacted.
What I am suggesting is that a responsible government should try to use measures to reduce shocks to an economy.
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Having an economy where people are able to get financing for houses, and having confidence to buy those houses if they choose to do so, would be a good first step.
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Nope. Saying that people who believe the fact that the gov intends to bail out the developers are 'narrow minded' and have a 'mob mentality' is just plain old patronising.
And anyway, nobody above said anything about the gov and property developers being buddies until MrMan did - "And that ends todays lesson on how to hit a nerve without even trying"!!!!!
Someone has already made a mess of making 'much needed funds available', it resulted in property being x 6.5 the average income, inflated, outside the reach of most FTB's, negative equity galore, people losing their homes and/or their savings invested in property, unavailability of credit etc etc etc…… oh..... and the brown stuff we're now in aka a crash of some description
Whoever they voted for, with the slowdown in sales, the electorate is demonstrating that they're not willing to continue paying for overpriced property. Paying for it by delivering a bailout consisting of tax we paid to the gov., is just paying without a say.
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The narrow mindedness was people saying that govt intervention was becasue they were bailing out their developer buddies, you can take what you want from what I said but the actual meaning remains the same.
Well, call me cynical, but we suddenly have a lot of talk about wanting to help FTBs. The government never seemed too concerned before when house prices were rocketing beyond the means of most of these same FTBs, and when average house prices reached 10 times the average industrial wage.
Sorry, but at best, anyone who thinks that the government is more concerned about FTBs than about developers ie helplessly naive. At best.
P.
Well, call me cynical, but we suddenly have a lot of talk about wanting to help FTBs. The government never seemed too concerned before when house prices were rocketing beyond the means of most of these same FTBs, and when average house prices reached 10 times the average industrial wage.
Sorry, but at best, anyone who thinks that the government is more concerned about FTBs than about developers ie helplessly naive. At best.
P.
With all the negative sentiment regarding a bailout for property developers Is it fair to assume that everybody agrees that the government were totally wrong to offer additional support to banks last night? Or is it one rule for the bankers and another for the rest?
Yes but for each house the government facilitates the sale of by offering approx 30k they will receive VAT payments, contributions to Local authorities, PAYE payments and tax on developer profits. As far as i know there is a lot of money in the price of a house going to the revenue in different taxes
Hi Meathman, would you care to take a stab at the figures for the given example? I am genuinely curious, and don't know the ins and outs of it
I'd have assumed VAT to be 40K - whatever VAT you've paid. Profits taxed @ 12.5%.Well the vat payment on a house €300,000 would be about €40,000, tax would be 42% of profits I would presume.
What the market needs more than anything is for sellers of second-hand houses to cut their sale prices to more realistic levels and for developers to slash their prices. Developers are desperate to avoid cutting their prices. Rather than dramatic price drops, we are seeing ruses such as free cars being offered with houses.
The money for a housing stimulus package would be better spent on the health and education sectors.
A society that values aiding developers over getting school children out of overcrowded prefabs is a society with a skewed set of priorities.
I'd have assumed VAT to be 40K - whatever VAT you've paid. Profits taxed @ 12.5%.
In both cases the figure may be at or close to zero depending upon the sale price versus costs.
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