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Don't worry, your generation will get a go, every generation does, then those who invest will make money and the next generation will complain about it...Crash means a return to equilibrium by clearing out unsustainable excess.
Those who get hurt will be those who took extravagant risk at the expense of taxpayer subsidies like negative gearing, leveraging tax discounted superannuation and at the expense of affordability for other generations.
Don't worry, your generation will get a go, every generation does, then those who invest will make money and the next generation will complain about it...
Don't forget, there are plenty of poor baby boomers, as there will be in your generation, investment and risk is a fact of life in a capitalist system.
I presume you aren't talking about me?How do you know what generation I'm in?
It's funny when people who had the Government subsidising their investments and cutting rates to protect from a healthy market for decades talk about risk in capitalism.
In a laissez faire economy, I have no doubt property would tank, but let's face it, Australia has used property speculation to prop up it's economy for quite some time now.
If property tanks, we are royally screwed, hence I reckon every effort will be made to keep it (over)inflated.
If property tanks, we are royally screwed, hence I reckon every effort will be made to keep it (over)inflated.
Given the laws to lock customers money into banks just recently, feels like they knew already.Agreed we would be screwed, agree that the govnuts will bankrupt the country to keep it afloat.
Can hear the shrills from the PM already, "Who could have seen this coming?"
Blind Freddie and Deaf Dandy did. Having some of the highest property prices in the world, mass immigration and grossly indebted nation. What could possibly go wrong?
A crash also means a return to better efficiency, atm we are far from it.
A crash means most people won't have jobs or money anyway. Overseas buyers could probably outbid locals again if they haven't already changed the threshold. I already know a lot of Chinese landlords.
If drastic falls came:
Banks won't be lending (especially to young people).
Massive debt will be the last thing on most people's mind.
Investors would make hay once again.
Halt overseas buyers buying up (another round) of our housing.
Our $ must have them drooling all over themselves.
Govt is addicted to the taxes and propping up of value. There are a huge number of rich overseas buyers. Many times our entire population. People forget the scale of overseas buyers.Halt overseas buyers buying up (another round) of our housing.
Our $ must have them drooling all over themselves.
Govt is addicted to the taxes and propping up of value. There are a huge number of rich overseas buyers. Many times our entire population. People forget the scale of overseas buyers.
If it was a choice of banks going underwater, along with everyone with an overpriced loan. Or prop up the industry so it doesn't collapse. Which one do people think the govt is going to do?
The days of letting things crash and let the market do it's thing seems to be over. Govt intervention and stimulus is the new normal.
I'd like to see prices go down. Hopefully we get a drift down to something more sensible.Means a generation of rent payers sending it straight overseas and working all the bottom jobs to service our new masters
I don't believe the government will do any such thing because it is really probably only the Chinese now who can keep our overinflated real estate market propped up to some degree.Halt overseas buyers buying up (another round) of our housing.
Our $ must have them drooling all over themselves.
I dont think its that hard to judge given the expected 7% plus unemployment rate to come I would expect it to be much higher.
If that happens last decent recession it took 14 years to get back any where close to the unemployment figures where it all started.
The unemployment this time around will likely be right thought all levels, that's a lot of mortgages to try and prop up or fall over.
Just cannot see it looking that good for demand or pricing.
Some economists, such as AMP’s Shane Oliver, estimate that prices could fall as much as 20% if the recession lasts more than six months
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