tech/a
No Ordinary Duck
- Joined
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How many dd you pick
The price of property was then relatively proportionate to income levels.While interest rates were higher, the price of property was much lower, and has been shown previously, the level of income devoted to mortgage repayments now are much higher than when you got to buy.
The price of property was then relatively proportionate to income levels.
Your limiting your observation to the topic at hand.
Widen your view and youll note.
(1) The Tech Boom
(2) The 2000-2008 Bull Market.
(3) Gold $250/oz to $1700
(4) The Aussi $ 50C to $1.10
(5) The crash of 2008 (Short!).
(6) Oil $40 a barrel to $125.
(7) Mining boom.
(8) Housing boom of the late 90s early 2000
In the next 30 yrs you'll see many many many more opportunities
just like these. Get one right with enough on it and youll change you life
Financially.
Clearly you've not seen my golf swing!
Phuket...Probably close to Patong. Lots of shopping there to keep the wife busy, but not too close so that its not peaceful.
CanOz
While interest rates were higher, the price of property was much lower, and has been shown previously, the level of income devoted to mortgage repayments now are much higher than when you got to buy.
People need to stop using the past to justify investment in housing NOW.
Australian households CAN'T triple their debt levels again.
Australians HAVE gone back to their historical level of saving 10% of their income.
House prices CAN'T increase faster than wages growth unless you can encourage people to save less. I would say we're a good decade away from people feeling that comfortable to go on a debt binge again.
It's not relevant that you've got a mortgage free IP or primary residence, or both. What is relevant is what can realistically occur going forward, and as yet I've not seen any evidence to show that house prices in general can take off again. If anything, lower interest rates are making people more scared and more likely to save than to go out and borrow.
Hands up anyone who knows someone with a home loan who has decreased their repayments due to lower interest rates? None of my friends have done this. Everyone I know who has debt is keenly focused on repaying it as fast as they can now.
And just a couple of questions for those of you who complain so bitterly about how much harder it is for you:
1. Are you and your partner both prepared to work two jobs throughout the week, and then another throughout the weekend, in order to save for a substantial deposit on the first home, and then to pay off the mortgage more quickly? And continue doing this for years?
2. Are you both prepared to do without new clothes (barring footwear and underwear), all travel and holidays, all entertainment, meals out etc, until you reach your goal?
3. When you do finally get that house, are you prepared to have second hand furniture and appliances while you continue to save to pay out the mortgage?
4. Will you postpone having children in favour of continuing the above measures?
The above are just some of the choices we made.
Even today, after so much progress has been made in this regard, there is still not equality of income for women for similar work.
I am glad you mentioned that Julia, we did the same and I can add a few too.
My wife worked full on 9 hour days then went to TAEF after work, got home at 8 PM, had dinner and a shower and off to bed early so she could wake up next day and do it all over again.
I was working shiftwork and on the changeover from day shift to night shift I spen the daytime working a second job.
Doing all the O/T i could get in order to pay off the mortgage ASAP rather than going to night clubs on a Friday night and buying $15 cocktails.
Living in a 1 bedroom unit many years before we could upgrade.
Scrounging around garage sales on a Saturday mornings to buy all those bits and pieces we couldn't afford new for the house.
I keep telling everyone, getting ahead means spending more time working hard and saving money and investing well. Nothing is free, hoping and wishing will not improve your financial situation.
Phuket, is the dearest place in Thailand, check out Pataya.
Kay. All my folks had to do was work at Coles and somehow were able to afford to buy a house.
I'll let the bank know their mortgage payment calculators are in error as I can't see how to afford a property on a Coles salary !
Kay. All my folks had to do was work at Coles and somehow were able to afford to buy a house.
I'll let the bank know their mortgage payment calculators are in error as I can't see how to afford a property on a Coles salary !
Kay. All my folks had to do was work at Coles and somehow were able to afford to buy a house.
I'll let the bank know their mortgage payment calculators are in error as I can't see how to afford a property on a Coles salary !
The Coles salary for a Service Assistant (checkout operator or shelf stacker) is currently $19.70 P/H not including Sundays which is $29.55 P/H. With 17.5% annual leave loading, a bit of O/T and some public holidays it can easily reach $42,000 P/A for a full time employee. That is roughly about $800 P/W gross.
Now even in an expensive area like the Northern Beaches of Sydney you can still buy a 1 br unit for 300K. Here is one just 5 minutes walk from the beach. http://www.realestate.com.au/property-unit-nsw-dee+why-112319279
Now how hard would it really be to save 29K for a deposit and borrow $260,000 and pay that off? According to UBanks calculator it would cost $1,455 P/M to pay off this loan at their current rate of 5.37%. $1,455 works out at $363 P/W. I can tell you now I would definitely be able to pay that off on my own even with a Coles salary. With a partner working as well it would be easier. Start small, work hard, be a bit frugal, save money, invest well and it will eventually all fall into place. If I was doing it all over again I would go this route which is the same route I took many years ago.
Mrmagoo, you make some very good points.
Having said that, I disagree with your assessment of the perpetrators.
Housing investors are mere pawns in a much larger game.
Where do you think the money comes from?
Fiat money, the only unlimited resource on earth.
The price of property was then relatively proportionate to income levels.
Perhaps consider when you state that "the level of income devoted to mortgage repayments are (sic) now much higher than you got to buy", what women earned was massively less than the income of men. Even today, after so much progress has been made in this regard, there is still not equality of income for women for similar work.
And just a couple of questions for those of you who complain so bitterly about how much harder it is for you:
1. Are you and your partner both prepared to work two jobs throughout the week, and then another throughout the weekend, in order to save for a substantial deposit on the first home, and then to pay off the mortgage more quickly? And continue doing this for years?
2. Are you both prepared to do without new clothes (barring footwear and underwear), all travel and holidays, all entertainment, meals out etc, until you reach your goal?
3. When you do finally get that house, are you prepared to have second hand furniture and appliances while you continue to save to pay out the mortgage?
4. Will you postpone having children in favour of continuing the above measures?
The above are just some of the choices we made.
Interest rates were high in the 80's but people were conservative, "don't borrow more than rent payments if your unemployed" was the mantra of the day.
Due to tax breaks on housing everyone sees it as a license to print money, the government doesn't want a collapse in the building industry, the banks can't afford a collapse.
So the elastic band gets stretched further, sooner or later it breaks or someone has to release the tension.
Your choice. Immaterial to me. Were you in NZ in the 70's and 80's?It might be just me, but I don't believe that for a second!
That's a wide statement. Why not start with something less than a house with land? As Bill suggested, make a start on home ownership, if that's what you want, with a small apartment in a suburb you aspire to move on from? He has given you an example of the figures.As usual apples and not being compared with apples.
It is a fact back in the 90s it was possible to buy a house with land and pay it off in 10years working hard.
It is not possible to buy a house with land now and pay it off in 10years working now.
Definitely agree about the greed in particular. You don't mention that wages are also up, of course.Times have changed, populations have increased, greed, inflation, tax all up also.
Um, "say rather than do"???? We did it.It will never be the same situation NOW compared to when the baby boomers were around. They like to tell stories of how HARD they did it. Not saying it was all handed on a plate for them, but its easy to sit back and say rather then do.
We all make choices all the time. It was just that - a choice. The aim was to have a fully paid off house asap.Needing to make those kinds of choices,
As I said, it was a choice. We had a goal, and then later I had my own goal, and that mattered more than exotic holidays and designer clothes. If others make different choices, then that's fine and entirely their business, but please don't complain that it's impossible to get into basic home ownership. It's all a matter of what your priorities are. I think attitudes were different a generation ago. There was a general acceptance that you sacrificed some of the fun stuff for a longer term goal. There was probably also more DIY where possible, egWhat you describe is not living, more along the lines of existing.
Certainly, but the individual can't do much to control the overall economy, therefore has to make decisions within the reality of what is.We seem to forget the economy is meant to serve us, not we to serve it.
Of course not, and you make good points about family life. We had no children.So kudos to you for going through what you did to get where you are, but I don't think we as a society should aspire to requiring everyone to do the same to have a decent life.
That 1 bedroom unit is more than 7 times that person's annual salary. Housing affordability is when you can buy a house for less than 5 times your annual salary (ideally about 3 times your annual salary).
No one is saying it can't be done but some of us are arguing that housing was more affordable for the baby boomers and - generally speaking- they had it easier.
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