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Thread: Wealth paradox

  1. #61
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    Quote Originally Posted by DaveS3 View Post
    Interesting topic, something I have been thinking & talking about with people of similar age to myself - many arguments here are of similar / mixed standings to myself.



    I have just turned 22 - still studying and will be for the next 18 months and will exit university with a piece of paper and a $35000 HECS debt (Not a massive drama, only goes up by CPI, comes off wage as tax so effectively it pays itself off)

    So I will be 23, without really having held a full time job, due to a full time study load with heavy course requirements - I have as worked for 14months full time with a company as experience, but at work exp rates.
    This doesn't enable me to save the way I would like to, and once finished I won't have a bank balance that even warrants considering the purchase of a property.

    Given a few years time, and I have managed to save some money and can consider the option of purchase it is now 5 years from the current time at minimum – what will prices and availability be like then? It is a scary thought, and most likely be a very real problem for those of my generation.


    With that being said, I don’t believe I will in a position of enormous difficulty, sure it may be tight when the time arises but I have the skills to nut it all out and make the decision and get through it. Although I do know a few people of a similar position whose career outlooks are much bleaker than mine.

    Whist it is said there is a housing crisis now, the future is not looking like it will ease for those who are struggling at this current period, especially if housing prices continue to rise at the same rate as they have over the previous 5 year period – even if the do decelerate, the rate still will not be proportional to wage increase rates for the average or median person.

    At the end of the day, land is not infinite. There is the old saying supply and demand; whilst the supply is steady and the demand is rising the prices will continue to go up. Those who wish to invest in property MUST have some bearing on this price rise as the are increasing demand whilst reducing supply – attribute it to ‘market conditions’ if you will, but this must have some bearing on the effect, justifying sentiments by some above.

    A block of land now is looking good!

    Cheers,
    Dave.
    Sounds like you have looked at the future wisely.

    There is no land shortage outside of the main cities.

    What the governments need to consider is how to encourage growth in regional areas. Sure the bells and whistles won't be many but at least housing will be affordable and considering the water crisis the goverment needs to get people to where the water is.

    How many new towns have been developed outside of the resource boom areas? Very few if any.

    Decentralising will be the easiest way to go. With internet it would be easy to operate a business in regional areas. I know of several shopfitting companies who build their products in regoinal Queensland and transport them throughout Australia. One company I used to work for sent a lot of office furniture to places like Darwin and Melbourne and many places in between.

    My future son-in-law is working at a company especially formed in Hobart as rents are cheaper than the mainland. He is doing animation so all he needs is a good computer and the internet. He has just completed a contract for Western Australia which he did in his flat in his own time.

  2. #62
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    Quote Originally Posted by leeds View Post
    As far as I remember in this thread no on has admitted that they personally invest in rental markets.
    Pick me, pick me!

    We have one house locally and we are actively looking for the next one.

  3. #63
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    Quote Originally Posted by vnx205 View Post
    I am genuinely sorry that I have to withdraw from the discussion for a day or two, but I am visiting relatives and my niece needs her computer back to do some schoolwork.

    I know it is unfair to make a parting comment then disappear for a couple of days, but I am going to do it anyway.

    Why are so many people so insistent (or is it just one person who is repeatedly insistent) that I am being jealous or resentful or something similar?

    Aren't other people prepared to look at situations from other people's points of view? Why do you assume they are my views? Is it just because I take pride in presenting a side of a case in a fairly robust manner?

    Apart from the obviously personal comments about my father and my first house, I am simply repeating arguments advanced by some of the panel on a recent episode of "Difference of Opinion" on TV. Those panelists were not personally attacked for presenting those views; why are people casting aspersions on my motives?
    I don't think I have attacked you (sincerest apologies if I have).

    I like to think that by owning rental properties I am actually giving back to the community.

    I provide good quality housing (it is arguably nicer than my own dwelling) at a reasonable price (as dictated by market forces).

    I freely admit that I want to make money from this sort of venture, but surely I am doing better for society by providing houses than, for example, just making cash by share / option trading?

  4. #64
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    Quote Originally Posted by barryj View Post
    There is no land shortage outside of the main cities.
    Bingo!! An excellent point.

    Too many people want it all now (the house and land package in the city) rather than move somewhere more "regional".

  5. #65
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    Quote Originally Posted by BigJon View Post
    Bingo!! An excellent point.

    Too many people want it all now (the house and land package in the city) rather than move somewhere more "regional".
    It is clear to me that people love to live in each others pockets, so to speak.

    Our family has been trying to sell a property at Boonah which is a comfortable drive from Ipswich. It's 93 acres all up on three titles adn we have not had one offer on it.

    People are spending half a million $ for land in Brisbane and what do they get, about 800 square metres of neighbours, and it still takes them an hour to get to work and more to get back.

  6. #66
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    Quote Originally Posted by barryj View Post
    It is clear to me that people love to live in each others pockets, so to speak.....

    People are spending half a million $ for land in Brisbane and what do they get, about 800 square metres of neighbours, and it still takes them an hour to get to work and more to get back.
    I can't wait to get out Barry. Just need to get myself a job somewhere.
    It is a 16km drive to work at the moment. It takes me between 35 and 60mins to get there and 35mins to get home.

  7. #67
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    Housing is a basic need. Trading in houses ("investing") withdraws houses from the market for owner-occupiers. If more up-market houses have better returns, then there is incentive to replace older housing stocks with better houses, renovate older houses, not build cheap houses etc. These things are all good for the economy but bad for people wanting to buy or rent houses to live in.

    Housing affordability isn't a new problem. Queensland (and I assume other states) is littered with cute little "Worker's cottages." - the size and type of house that you could afford on your Government grant. They have 4 rooms and a kitchen on the back verandah. I've lived in a few - one notable one had clearly been owner-built by a short fellow - none of the doors were the same height and all were shorter than 5'10". It was owner-built because the grants were enough to buy materials, not pay labour.

    Property is a good investment because values rise. Values rise because investing in property is a good investment, so whatever price I buy at it will appreciate.

    Not true, of course. I bought a house, in a "dress circle" area of town, for $140,000 in 2000. It had sold for $160,000 ten years earlier. I sold it for $300,000 (with some renos, but would still have gone close to doubling in value without them) at the start of this year. There is no way the cost of living, income etc, doubled in that time. Housing was silly in Toowoomba 2-3 years before I sold (I probably would have made at least $50,000 more by selling a year or more earlier) - houses were sold before they were listed. If you wanted a house you added your name to a list in the Real Estate agents and bought whatever came up.

    The typical house in Toowoomba at the moment would be in the $300-400,000 bracket. You can get examples under $200,000, though you might think twice about living in them. Median wages are less than $50,000. If you spent the 1/3 of your income that banks think you can, you would be able to pay off a typical house (not taking interest into account) in 20-25 years. So, say 60+ years with interest. THAT is unaffordable.

    I'm with vnx205, obviously Investing in housing is good for the individual, and some of that is at the expense of broader community benefits in affordable housing. Of course, more affordable housing would be at the expense of overstretched investors like those in the first scenario.
    Steve

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  8. #68
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    People like those you have all been admiring for their financial genius are probably the most important single reason why so many first home buyers can't even go close to affording a home.
    The activities of those people investing in property drives the price up.
    It is only because property is a good investment that they put their money into houses. They invest knowing that the price will go up and they know they can sell at a profit because someone else knows that they can fairly safely pay a ridiculous amount for the property because demand will force the price up even further.
    Since property is such a good investment, no-one is interested in building or financing affordable housing. The bigger the house, the bigger the return, so two income, one child families build a Mcmansion to maximise their return.
    As is so often the case when someone makes a profit it is at someone else's cost.
    If housing was not such a good investment, we would not have a housing affordability crisis as severe as the one we have now.
    As I am part of the generation who could afford to buy a home (even if I did have to pay 17% interest for a time), I am not making this point because I missed out. It is current crop of young parents who are suffering.
    Those people who are securing their own financial security are choosing to do it in a way that almost ensures that a lot of other people will struggle financially all their lives.
    Before anyone points out that everyone could do the same, let me suggest that usually when it comes to having to make a choice between paying the family grocery bill or the electricity bill, or investing in a property on the Gold Coast, parents tend to choose to feed the kids.
    Greed may be good for the greedy, but it forces others to pay for the luxuries the greedy enjoy.
    I'm with vnx205, obviously
    Are you sure?
    Housing affordability isn't a new problem.
    Regards

    Stevo

  9. #69
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    Quote Originally Posted by scrambler View Post
    Housing is a basic need. Trading in houses ("investing") withdraws houses from the market for owner-occupiers.
    Maybe so, but not everyone wants to be an owner-occupier.
    That being the case (and it is a FACT), then someone has to own the houses that these people rent.
    Surely I can be that person, rather than the government.

  10. #70
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    Why are so many people so insistent (or is it just one person who is repeatedly insistent) that I am being jealous or resentful or something similar?

    Aren't other people prepared to look at situations from other people's points of view? Why do you assume they are my views? Is it just because I take pride in presenting a side of a case in a fairly robust manner?
    Me thinks in part this was levelled at myself. If anything I challenged the original view point and the opinion. The aim was to "stir" things up and it got stirred. One cannot then complain that it has been stirred. When it comes to viewpoint/ opinion etc the reason that it comes across with passion is generally the person believes in what they are articulating.

    So yes I would say you do share some of the views that you have written, as you have been fairly succinct in the examples. Because I challenge that perspective is not to say I am "attacking" you per se but the opinion. You even acknowledged that the perception of the content being of a jealous/ envious nature would be detected, or raised.

    As stated before, and one can always find variances, but generally property has always been a good investment, not just because of the current government or its policies. Housing crisis is a great drawcard for the opposition and media, but in reality there are plenty of affordable houses through out the state, it is a case of whether people are prepared to work hard and save. My previous example shows that it is not impossible. Guaranteed there are new immigrants who have come over here with nothing and likely to be miles ahead of the whingers, because they have seen the opportunity that Australia presents them ( ie there option may have been a mud hut, no sewerage, lack of transport etc etc). But the lucky little Aussie can't see that, and that applies to employment as well, some just don't know how lucky we are,

    Regards

    Stevo

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