Robots,
The next few weeks will give a better picture of the demand supply situation with a dramatic increase in volume of properties offered at auction.
The next few months will be interesting with the FHBG being reduced and a more than likely increase in IR rates. Just a small increase will get people thinking.
I personally are looking forward to heavily loading up on debt in the new year for property purchases, just waiting for interest rates to go up.
Cheers
For those that we up early in Melbourne this morning, it was one of the most stunning sun rises I have seen in a long time.
If investment incentives were reduced, wouldn't that reduce demand by the investment crowed and in effect reduce prices which will allow many of those current renters who have been locked out due to price to free up rentals and buy their own property.
Step back and have a look for a minute on a large scale. Over the last 10 years or so the prices have increased exceptionally and pushed ownership further up the earnings ladder. Now what happens to those who now cannot afford to purchase, they must rent of course which puts pressure on rents.
Have a look at the past 6 months or so and you'll see there is a large FHB group that would jump at the chance for affordable new housing...........surely no one could ignore the flood of FHB due to the lower rates and FHBG boost..............reduce the investment incentives, allow housing to become more affordable and I'd bet this "property shortage" would be sorted pretty quick.
cheers
The only thing that will reduce the price is increasing the supply of the banana's.
c. Family Benefits for a 2 child family equate to $186.20 per fn for Part B (unless they're younger, in which it's higher). The lowest rate for Part A on ave salary is $313.88 per fn. That's $26,000 pa extra income not factored into your scenario, which makes quite a difference. If either child is under 5, the amount of Part B increases and if either child is over 13, the amount of Part A increases.
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Good analogy, but if they borrowed to buy the banana's and the interest rates were to rise and they cant afford to pay it then they will want to unload those banana's and the price will drop. Or if costs of food, school fees go up and jobs start to be lost, again not able to afford to support the holding of banana's price will drop
It will if there is incentive to build instead of buying existing.simply turning renters into property owners doesn't increase supply so you are still stuck with higher rents.
............And what if that poorest guy was only given the money to build his own banana tree.........I do understand that the FHBG have upward effect on prices, but they can be used to direct FHB to a particular sector, that's why I said:Picture a table with 5 people at it and in the centre is 4 banana's, The supply is not enough for everybody, but all 5 people want a banana so the person with the least to spend is going to miss out because the bidding will increase till the poorest person drops out. However giving the poor guy more money will just increase the price higher, someone still must miss out.
The only thing that will reduce the price is increasing the supply of the banana's.
These numbers are grossly overstated.
I get the maximum amount of A and B due to estimated family income below $45k. I have THREE kids. Total assistance from FTB A and FTB B is about $18k a year
Thanks Gooner. It would seem quite difficult to manage a morgage of x7 average income and raise three children on these figures. This was all I was trying to show, that affordability is out the door in this country due to excessive credit and NG.
Cheers
If someone can't afford to buy a place to live it is because of their failure to save and invest, or their standards are to high.
I am sick hearing people who go through their late teens and twenties living the life of hyper consumers and arrive at age 30 and complain they can't afford their dream home.
I am also sick of low and middle income people looking at the price of 3 bedroom house and land within 15 kms of sydney and complaining that they could never afford to own one. Get with the programme people your not supposed to be able to afford a 3bedroom home on a decent block of land 15kms from sydney.
Our big capital cities are getting over crowded and there is simply not enough land for every family to own a house and land near the city, So someone has to miss out, and it's not going to be the high incomes.
If you can't settle for what your budjet provides for then you must live the life of a renter.
I think you missed my point though........Hypothetically do you think there would be a supply shortage if the median price was $250k instead of nearly $450k?
When I was in my early twenties I saved money, deferred travel, drove a second hand car etc (self maintained) etc, and bought a house in 1992. At this time, although prices were cheaper in income/price ratio terms (although Sydney median house price was 7x average full time wage), interest rates were way higher at over 10% - so affordability was actually about the same as today, possibly even higher actually. Many of my friends/colleagues/peers at the same age were spending nearly every cent and traveling the world, buying new cars (on credit) etc having a ball, but with no eye to the future. Having just seen the great Sydney house price boom of 1988-1989, they should have been as aware as I was that securing home ownership as soon as possible was going to be a life defining decision (financially at least).
I think you may have missed my point........prices have become too high for the average punter..........they cannot buy so they have to rent..........lower prices and they can build a new home which adds one more house to the supply.
cheers
In the 80s the Hawke/Keating government tried removing negative gearing for a couple of years - it was an un-mitigated disaster and sparked a rental accommodation crisis and spiralling rents. So past facts/history supports my view.
You need to work through the maths a bit better and try to remove your emotion from the situation, and maybe you would not laugh so much at statements like mine, which actually represent pretty mainstream thinking on the issue around treasury and the political arena etc. $12B a year in tax deductions/refunds for property investors - sounds like a lot? But it is really? Especially given that in 07/08 (the tear being used) interest rates increased to their highest levels since the mid-90s?
There are between 2.5M and 3M renting households in Australia. So $12B/year means that on average landlord costs are subsidised by $4k-$5k per year per rental (ie $75-$100/week). That's really not very much at all, and FAR LESS than it would cost the government to attempt to provide that housing itself if negative gearing were scrapped and 90% of private property investors exited the market.
Also, rents in Australia are CHEAP compared to other countries by any measure - especially the US, UK etc. Part of the reason for that is NG - so postulate and pontificate all you like about the removal of NG and pretend all you like that it has nothing to do with the availability of relatively low cost rental housing in Australia, but it is not going to be going away any time soon.
Cheers,
Beej
If investment incentives were reduced, wouldn't that reduce demand by the investment crowed and in effect reduce prices which will allow many of those current renters who have been locked out due to price to free up rentals and buy their own property.
..............................>
cheers
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