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Why Is Continually Rising House Prices Considered A Good Thing?
18 Answers
and why if they stagnate or fall it's bad? Surely there must come a point when first time buyers will no longer be able to get on the housing ladder so prices will then stop rising. A house is primarily for living in, not an investment.
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No best answer has yet been selected by dave50. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you think of the economy as the human body, then Housing is a major organ. It generates masses of cash through the building of the houses themselves and keeps an awful lot of people employed who then go on tho pump their 'hard-earned' back into the economy. People then go on to spend a considerable amount of their income on furnishing / fitting out their houses, which also keeps many manufacturers afloat.
You are correct tho, there is a fast approaching hiatus where FTBs will not be able to afford to get a foot on the ladder. This is an opportunity for those who already have money to become landlords or expand their housing stock. This is one of the factors in the increasing rich / poor gap.
There are many more complex factors but a forum isn't really the place to go into them.
You are correct tho, there is a fast approaching hiatus where FTBs will not be able to afford to get a foot on the ladder. This is an opportunity for those who already have money to become landlords or expand their housing stock. This is one of the factors in the increasing rich / poor gap.
There are many more complex factors but a forum isn't really the place to go into them.
"In the 70's my mortgage was 3 times my annual income, I dread to think how first time buyers cope with current prices."
Quite so, baza. But in the 70s and 80s mortgage rates were a lot higher than they are now. When we bought our first house the repayments took all of mine and a good chunk of Mrs NJ's monthly salary. How many younger buyers can claim that today?
The root cause of the housing "crisis" is too many people. The country is importing a net quarter of a million people annually and they all have to live somewhere. Supply and demand means that prices will rise. When nobody can afford to buy they will fall.
Quite so, baza. But in the 70s and 80s mortgage rates were a lot higher than they are now. When we bought our first house the repayments took all of mine and a good chunk of Mrs NJ's monthly salary. How many younger buyers can claim that today?
The root cause of the housing "crisis" is too many people. The country is importing a net quarter of a million people annually and they all have to live somewhere. Supply and demand means that prices will rise. When nobody can afford to buy they will fall.
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