Well, taxed parent, maybe people in group (a) were a young couple with a child that needed a home and did not have your brilliant perception regarded the overpriced housing bubble or the forthcoming economic crisis.
Please dont take my post as an ego boost, Im really not trying to say this at all. Just because you have a family doesn't mean you have to go out and buy a house. You can rent/house share etc its not an automatic go buy a property. All around me friends family etc were goading me into why I wasn't being "adult" by buying house for the birth of my kid etc. I just didn't listen to them, they weren't the ones having to pay the money back so I didn't feel it was important for them to tell me what to do. There is a big problem in the country around the perceived right thing to do (property ownership), its just the done thing and I couldn't justify paying 400-500k for something that cost 70-80k to build.
Furthermore, these ordinary young Irish citizens were constantly bombarded with "expert" advice from their own banks, the media and government -buy,buy,buy - here's loads of money. (And that's besides the enormous peer pressure at the time.)
Same answer as above really, nobody forced them to do anything. The looked at the options, made an informed decision and went with it. The consequences of a good/bad decision remain firmly on the decision maker. We are trying to make the people higher powers accountable too so why shouldn't it be any different to the people who bought into it.
Also, perhaps that young couple didn't quite foresee that one or both of them would be jobless in a couple of years. You evidently foresaw the economic crisis and I congratulate you for your foresight.
If your going to borrow large sums of money from the bank, and you don't think about the future I would put this down to a signifancant oversight on the decision maker. You have to plan for the worst to see if it works out or not. I definitely do agree the banks didn't do enough stress testing on borrower, but some of this responsibility does also lie with the borrower too.
Now, if none of the banks, nobody in government, few in the media foresaw all this are you seriously stating that those people who,like all of us, depend on advice from experts, and are now suffering should be " fully accountable".
Correct my view point hasn't changed since reading your post, if anything it has compounded my belief that there shouldn't be an preferential treatment(debt forgivenes/mortgage bonus etc) for people who made bad decisions throughout the boom times.
Everyone is now paying for this in some way or another through higher taxes/charges/duties etc. It galls me further that there is an expectation that any kind of "forgiveness" should be on the table.
What, taxed parent, do you mean by that ?
Old Nick
(another taxed parent)
(i assume that, with your perceptive analysis of the housing market, you sold your house during the peak of the bubble , made a killing and then rented a similar house . If not,why not? - I can't understand all these people who "knew" there'd be crash but never did a thing to benefit from it)
I thought of buying a house around 2005. I didn't really know anything about how it worked, what you had to do etc. After going through all of ads, docs, asking people I just decided that it would be a bad move to pay a crazy amount of money for a house. I didn't make any money on it, but I suppose you could look at now and say I saved myself a lot of grief.
Do look at the flip side, if the bubble hadn't burst and property prices continued their upwards trend I would be in much worse place now thinking about buying a house. It would be much harder to get on the ladder if I hadn't bought in the last 6 years. If that happened would I have anyone to blame but myself?