Yes, I also have a friend who is having a Coral house built on his land. Good value for money. But it's not a McMansion.
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Yes, I also have a friend who is having a Coral house built on his land. Good value for money. But it's not a McMansion.
My heart bleeds for the current crop of youngsters, facing an impossible battle to save up and buy with less than TWO percent interest rates...
Me and the Missus lashed out some 40 years ago, with a $32k 3x1 house of barely 11 squares. Being a scrooge, I paid out extra to lock our variable rate to a ceiling of .....
- 11%. [bigsmile]
Very glad we did, for when the rates topped out at 17 %, we were nearly paid off. About 12 years ago (after they dropped down to sanity.) we extended / doubled the area. Cost us another $30K to do it. Few more years of paying extra...and its ours, lock, stock and barrel.
My first and last new car was.... the HX runout.
What! You mean it is possible to not live in Melbourne and Sydney and constantly bemoan the property prices? You wouldnt know that from media coverage. It is a very limiting discourse for anyone “trapped” in the cities. A bit of meaningful regional development incentive would be useful. And from a vic perspective that should not be limited to Ballarat, Bendigo and places within cooee of Melbourne.
Lotta Sydney people have given up on Sydney and are buying in the regions, particularly SE Qld.
yes, they seem to love the 3-400sqm blocks with 25sq homes stacked on them.....
They're affordable. What's not to like about a $200,000 four bed, two bath, two garage plus land cost? Land is more expensive than the house itself.
At risk of repeating myself, we need to develop an economy that is not based on selling houses to each other. An economy based on value adding to our natural resources and primary produce then exporting the products. There needs to be much more manufacturing in Australia. Only manufacturing can provide the large numbers of low skill jobs to employ the 800,000 or more unemployed and disability pensioners with a capacity to work.
It's called the "Resource Curse" and basically it says that a country blessed (cursed) with natural resources does not invest in education and training for it's people, nor in manufacturing as it is just too easy to dig stuff up and export it. Also the best and brightest are attracted away from government and politics, which ends up in a dearth of good policy. Resource curse - Wikipedia