over9k
So I didn't tell my wife, but I...
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- 12 June 2020
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What's the trade & how much are you paying the apprentices?Certainly true in my trade.
I've just moved home to Western Australia, my last move. I expected to be twiddling my thumbs for 2 or 3 months but I have been absolutely inundated with work in the first 5 weeks, due to an absolute shortage of qualified tradesmen in my field.
Guys are finding it impossible to get apprentices. We are pretty well paid but the work is hard and our clients are generally freaking nuts in some way... Easier to sit in an air conditioned Haulpak listening to country music up in Newman or somewhere.
Guys like me that can do specialised stuff can just name our price, because literally almost nobody can do it here.
The Gap has been filled in the past by 457 Poms, but they ain't happening now.
I think one thing that is often overlooked when comparing houses prices from decades ago to current day prices—is that I vividly remember when my parents were seeking out their first home loan in the early 70s it was extraordinary difficult for most people to get a home loan from a bank. The banks’ approach to loans and monetary policy in general was extremely tight and you had to jump through a lot of hoops to get a loan and the rejection rate was very high. Relative to back then—it is just so easy for people to get loans these days. Downside of that is that there is far more cheap money floating around which is driving prices up. Is this not the result of decades of government deregulation, easing of monetary policies and generally winding back government influence and letting the market decide it’s own course?I think the way this conversation has gone says rather a lot in itself really.
Universities, TAFE and so on. The housing crisis, and I do agree it is a crisis, is symptomatic of a much broader problem not confined to housing itself.
The only thing I think the younger ones miss, is the past also had problems. Different problems yes but don't kid yourself into thinking it was all just fine. There were some good things in the past, cheap housing is one of them, but there were some very definite problems that the older half is all too aware of and wouldn't wish on anyone.
Back to house prices specifically well I question how it's really going to go much higher?
Immigration has fallen in a heap and population is a definite driver of the requirement for housing.
Meanwhile the amount of building work going on means supply is being ramped up.
Interest rates can't realistically go any lower.
Etc.
Interestingly appreciations in stocks and property have coincided with declining IR in the last 40 years. This amongst all drivers especially in property this is the most significant one.We've seen massive, unprecedented inflation for 22 years running now, we've just seen it in something that isn't counted in the metric: Housing.
Hence why housing can (will... has) go stratospheric and the central bank does nothing. Which is exactly what has happened.
Only NZ is even so much as acknowledging this, which of course begs the question of whether it's an accident or not
Fact is that there's only two politicians in the country that don't own an investment property. Two. That should really tell you everything you need to know reference what is going to happen/continue to happen to house prices.
I'm a farrier. Don't know what farrier apprentices get paid as I don't have them, but someone coming out of their time could easily earn over 100k.What's the trade & how much are you paying the apprentices?
I don't think that's only due to ability to repay it but also an intentional choice not to.It is interesting to note that downward trend of owners without a mortgage
Agreed, it is nice to have some decent digs, but holy smokes, does it have to resemble the interior of Buckingham palace and maintained like a show home?It's not the greatest house in the world I acknowledge that, but paying almost $1 million for a place with the intent of turning it into rubble?
Felixstow property fetches huge price at auction following strong competition - realestate.com.au
Most of the hopeful buyers interested in this dated house wanted it just to knock it down. That didn’t stop them from making high bids at auction though.www.realestate.com.au
No doubt they're making money out of it but it's a strange situation in my view when the building itself is seen as only worth knocking down.
House looks imperfect but good enough to me, I'd live in it. Just needs painting and so on. Many are too fussy in my view.....
My house is 1960's for the record. Partly renovated but still have the 1960's pink bathtub.
It's not the greatest house in the world I acknowledge that, but paying almost $1 million for a place with the intent of turning it into rubble?
Felixstow property fetches huge price at auction following strong competition - realestate.com.au
Most of the hopeful buyers interested in this dated house wanted it just to knock it down. That didn’t stop them from making high bids at auction though.www.realestate.com.au
No doubt they're making money out of it but it's a strange situation in my view when the building itself is seen as only worth knocking down.
House looks imperfect but good enough to me, I'd live in it. Just needs painting and so on. Many are too fussy in my view.....
My house is 1960's for the record. Partly renovated but still have the 1960's pink bathtub.
This is the problem today IMO, too many see their PPR as an investment, in reality it isnt, it is the place that keeps the weather off your $hit.Agreed, it is nice to have some decent digs, but holy smokes, does it have to resemble the interior of Buckingham palace and maintained like a show home?
The most friendly place that we ever had was a 10 square 1950s fibro drivers cottage on 16 acres, which which was once part of the midland abattoirs holding paddocks.
It was a s**thole we made somewhat liveable by begging, borrowing and stealing decent second-hand stuff.
The back verandah used to always fall down when the Easterlies were blowing.
... But everybody dropped in all the time and weekend mornings invariably entailed navigating through overhung bodies and empty bottles of woobla (it was even an empty of Grange on the floor one morning lol)
But once we could afford The fairly big joint on acreage in Kalamunda, everything changed. Well, we hadn't changed but people's perception had. Suddenly everyone became rather stiff and worried about spilling red on the carpet.... And we only lived in about a third of the house anyway.
Our next digs are going to be humble and friendly. We want to be seen for our character, not the edifice that we have spent way too much money on creating.
We may not choose a place with a pink bath however
Muppets, I bet you didn't buy there Humid.Family Lives The New Australian Dream Of Barely Being Able To Pay Mortgage On Yardless Display Home
More to come.www.betootaadvocate.com
Boomered lol
Replace the word "boomer" with a descriptive term for pretty much any other group and those saying it would be up in arms alleging all sorts of wrongdoing and rightly so. And yet when they're doing it themselves there's silence.I really think, there is going to be a big backlash from boomers, the constant media demonising, is going to cause a huge amount of resentment.
Same here.Though with the house in the link I'd probably change the interior walls and update the kitchen. But otherwise fine haha.
Who is the real enemy?Replace the word "boomer" with a descriptive term for pretty much any other group and those saying it would be up in arms alleging all sorts of wrongdoing and rightly so. And yet when they're doing it themselves there's silence.
Sexism.
Racism.
Homophobia.
Ageism.
All from the same book of evil and all belong in the same place.
There's an issue with house prices I agree but targeting an entire generation is nothing more than the age old tactic of rallying the troops behind an identified target who isn't the real enemy. That one's as old as the hills and never solves the problem.
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