I agree with deflating slowly. The current government is on the right track with this.This is exactly what I was talking about a while ago.
The lowering of Australian house prices is critical, that people will be hurt, is unavoidable.
The only thing that can reduce the pain and economical impact, is by deflating prices as slowly as possible, but having said that everyone except you and smurph bagged me for suggesting that.
So it obviously doesn't worry most ASF members, and if they represent the feeling of the majority of Australians, I think we are in for one hell of a shock.
You make a good point about tradies, I am getting a gas HWS changed over to electric and a gas cooktop changed to inductive.I agree with deflating slowly. The current government is on the right track with this.
Housing is currently sliding down in price where I am. Tradies are also getting hard up for work and dropping prices. Many are working out of area at reduced prices which has a flow on effect. I'm also wondering about peoples levels of savings. Seems to be a lot living week to week.
I think if its played wrong then Australia is in for a major shock.
You make a good point about tradies, I am getting a gas HWS changed over to electric and a gas cooktop changed to inductive.
I was expecting a rude shock from the plumber, he quoted $200, that wouldn't have happened a couple of years ago. You would have been lucky to get one and the price would have been triple.
It sounds as though Sydney could be doing it tough this year, with property. Still it was one hell of a bubble, like all bubbles, some make money some get burnt.
https://www.watoday.com.au/business...ts-line-up-for-fire-sale-20190130-p50ulb.html
All I can say is, welcome to the Perth market, ours has been in the doldrums for a few years.
I suppose it will really hit REIT's, which I was starting to look at, with the impending franking changes.Maybe load up on property-related stocks in a couple years time. Alright, maybe a decade's time.
I suppose it will really hit REIT's, which I was starting to look at, with the impending franking changes.
I suppose it will really hit REIT's, which I was starting to look at, with the impending franking changes.
My understanding, which could be wrong, is that a REIT is a Real Estate Investment Trust...trusts pass through all income, thus no company tax paid.
No company tax paid = no franking credits = would not be effected by any changes to franking credit refunds.
I think the problem is that it's simply so long since we last had a recession. It's now to the point that "the recession" to the younger half of the population is a bit like "World War 2" was to the previous generation. You know it happened and was bad but have no real comprehension of it beyond a few basic facts. Since it was so long ago and hasn't happened again you've got no serious expectation of personally living through anything like that.So it obviously doesn't worry most ASF members, and if they represent the feeling of the majority of Australians, I think we are in for one hell of a shock.
I remember in 1982, due to a family health issue I had to relocate to Perth, unfortunately it was bang in the middle of the recession.
The only job advertised in Perth for an electrician, was in a small family run electronics business that employed four people.
I went for the interview and when it finished, I asked how many people were they interviewing, they said they had short listed 170.
Is the Pope a catholic? does Dolly Parton sleep on her back? do the bears $hit in the forest?Did you get the gig?
You are right, people reason from experience.Economies and river eco systems have a lot in common.
For a river eco system to flourish and grow, it requires a flood to clear out built up debris that has accumulated over time, the flood in turn, replenishes the dams and billabongs along it edges, where new life can be created and nutured until the next flood, where it is returned to the main river way.
We are seeing this first hand along the Murray Darling basin at the moment, result, no floods, system is dying.
So an economy is no different, replace flood with recession, debris with debt. Dams and billabongs, with startups and new ideas.
We dammed the recession for 2 long, we haven't allowed the natural course of events to transpire, we continue to kid the can down the road, in this case built a bigger dam wall, but the bigger it gets the greater the chance of major structural meltdown. In this case we have accumulated massive amount of debt and the river system (economy) is starting to get sick and slowly die.
- We have lowered IR to the lowest in history,
- we have tap every conceivable pool of capital in the economy and leverage against it with debt (future capacity),
- we have sold our land to foreigners, which should be for Australians,
- we have allowed our retires to leverage up against their super, their retirement into one asset class,
- we continue to promote economical models that are not relevant to the current world we live in.
- we need more discussion on not how to prevent a recession but how we will grow from it, flourish again and improve.
- We can keep ignoring it, but just like a tumor, if we ignore it 2 long, eventually you die.
No one likes a flood and no one likes a recession, but they are inevitable, you can try and control them, but nature will always win.
We need to accept, that if we enter into a recession, it is for a reason;
- it makes the economy and the people within it more lean,
- more hungry to survive,
- it promotes change of thinking,
- it brings on creativity,
- it flushes out inefficiency that have accumulated,
- it makes people more alert,
- more determine,
- more planned.
We have become lazy as a nation, our politicians even more so, this is a time for leaders to stand up, face adversity and work together to get us through this oncoming flood.
I use the term "we" as all of us are in this together, that is what makes a great community, a great society and a great country.
BLAME today and in the future will not see us through this, passion and determination to make our country better than it was yesterday, the week before, the year before etc etc will.
We need to look forward and work together.
Someone kindly told me I was an idealist, they were correct, but if one cannot dream, one cannot have passion, a willingness to change and face adversity, then I wonder why one wishes to live.
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