If only we had something like a subprime lending bubble in our recent past to inform us of whether this is a good idea…
Beyond that, the problem is that the market is bloated. Too many boomers holding houses as retirement gigs. Too many corps and foreign entities owning houses that sit empty or are airbnbs.If only we had something like a subprime lending bubble in our recent past to inform us of whether this is a good idea…
We simply aren’t a serious country anymore.
good luck to the folks who can’t afford a down payment that need to rent when the landlord needs to raise costs to cover the new taxes you levied on themI know this is pretty economically illiterate, but I think we need to go scorched earth on taxation for any residential properties owned by non-residents of that property. If our alternatives are 50-year mortgages and more subprime lending, you’d might as well just rip the band-aid off and let the whole house crumble.
I’d envision some sort of system to exclude existing properties, but yeah you’re obviously right. I just don’t know what you do about the housing market at this point. The consolidation of property and labor toward fewer capital owners is one of the market conditions I think you need to actively combat at the state level.good luck to the folks who can’t afford a down payment that need to rent when the landlord needs to raise costs to cover the new taxes you levied on them
Build more housing... particularly luxery housing.I’d envision some sort of system to exclude existing properties, but yeah you’re obviously right. I just don’t know what you do about the housing market at this point. The consolidation of property and labor toward fewer capital owners is one of the market conditions I think you need to actively combat at the state level.
I agree with building more housing. But I still think you pair that with something resembling anti-trust enforcement. I think there’s too many financial gimmicks available for corporations to allow for an arms race that threatens the efficacy of any such push, but I primarily support that effort regardless.Build more housing... particularly luxery housing.
People upgrade, creating availability in normal properties
Look at the regions where housing prices and rents have fallen and emulate them (Texas, Denver, Florida, etc.)I’d envision some sort of system to exclude existing properties, but yeah you’re obviously right. I just don’t know what you do about the housing market at this point. The consolidation of property and labor toward fewer capital owners is one of the market conditions I think you need to actively combat at the state level.
The crazy thing is that we're going to enter a housing crush when boomers decide to actually cash in those retirement properties. And it will SUCK to try to sell your house in that market.Look at the regions where housing prices and rents have fallen and emulate them (Texas, Denver, Florida, etc.)
The answer is build more housing and tell the boomers whose entire retirement nest egg is tied up in their home value it’s time to sacrifice for the younger generation like their parents did for them
Probably not. We will go through several cycles by then.The crazy thing is that we're going to enter a housing crush when boomers decide to actually cash in those retirement properties. And it will SUCK to try to sell your house in that market.
Yes. It doesn't really matter what kind of housing is built. Just add to the supply.Build more housing... particularly luxery housing.
People upgrade, creating availability in normal properties
I don’t think that was the point he was making.
Imagine working in an environment where you have multiple daily meetings featuring 20-40 participants and people are hired that cannot perform the basic functions of the job and deciding it’s the Indians that are the problem.