It is a holiday home on another Island. Now is a good time to buy, we are going to go there and work on it during our vacation time there. Who says interest rates will rise in the foreseeable future? Have you seen the 10 year curve?
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Well yes and no. What I mean is that the opportunity cost of holding a property vacant have all but disappeared. When r was 8% then sitting on property was costly. Now that its 1% or less, not so much. I think that is also why property prices have held up so well post covid, because the rates have come down so quickly. I also acknowledge that when and if interest rates go up that could put some serious pressure on the property market. Can't see it in the next 5 -10 years though.
Sure, however - landlords might decide to not rent out their houses to avoid the loss of value some tenants tend to inflict on their property. Less housing stock available.
If landlords sell, the now owner might as well live themselves in the house - and we learned before that less people (per house) live in owner occupied buildings - i.e. some of the previous renters miss out and either need additional space to live or live on the street.
Obviously - if renting out of houses is unattractive, than less people will build new houses for renting them out. Nobody will replace anymore houses past their use by date. Rental stock goes down.
What ever it is - the number of houses to rent will go down if government makes it less attractive for landlords to rent them out. Economy 101. Only potential remedy of this situation would be for the government to become landlord and build like crazy.
Unfortunately - I remember balance telling us how this works out ... and despite disliking the way he expresses this problem, he unfortunately has a point.
Housing stock available for rent will go down. Remaining housing stock for rent will deteriorate. Better get used to it.
Our lawmakers who live comfortably, most in cities, clearly have no notion of how rural and provincial folk live. For example the cost of compliance to new standards is the same - or more - for a farm cottage in the middle of nowhere as for a Parnell bungalow. Rent, slightly different!
A cottage on my grandparents farm housed locals for decades. It was basic but liveable and cheap. Now it is empty, starting to deteriorate, and will never be lived in again.
Not far from the town centre, so not isolated. It won't be the only one left empty once the owners have read the massive list of fines for landlords who don't comply, many payable to the tenants who lay a complaint.
Lunchtime and rest breaks will be axed under Judy.
Sounds like a plan to employ less rather than more if the same work needs to be done?
Will her friends Mike and Heather ask how she will pay for her tax credits and other "unfunded" goodies to large business.