Soldato
- Joined
- 12 May 2004
- Posts
- 7,018
- Location
- England
80% tax on seconds home sales or income.
A special tax on 2nd homes?
A special tax on 2nd homes?
Stupid idea, it's just supply and demand.
When supply can't meet demand, or vice versa that's when the market ceases to function rationally and regulators need to step in. A good example is food during WW2 - supply could not meet demand so rationing was introduced to ensure prices did not rise exorbitantly and everyone could eat something.
but this is proposing controlling price not supply... which is silly IMO... relaxing controls on supply (planning controls) would be better
When supply can't meet demand, or vice versa that's when the market ceases to function rationally and regulators need to step in. A good example is food during WW2 - supply could not meet demand so rationing was introduced to ensure prices did not rise exorbitantly and everyone could eat something.
At the end of the day the government don't really want house prices to come down. The economy depends on house price inflation to keep things going.
When supply can't meet demand, or vice versa that's when the market ceases to function rationally and regulators need to step in. A good example is food during WW2 - supply could not meet demand so rationing was introduced to ensure prices did not rise exorbitantly and everyone could eat something.
At the end of the day the government don't really want house prices to come down. The economy depends on house price inflation to keep things going.
Which is being done. My contention is that there'd be a greater supply of housing available to buy, which is what you're encouraged to do in the UK, if buy-to-let was discouraged.
Britain should go back to expensive credit and cheap houses, put the interest rates up to 10% minimum. 50% deposit for the purpose of buying property to let out as with the old commercial mortgage lending.
80% of first time buyers in 1996 did so without needing additional financial assistance i.e. BOMAD or help to buy.
Supply will never meet demand.
Demand for housing is virtually limitless. Everyone wants a bigger one in a better location. It's increased wealth chasing the same housing stock which create house price inflation.
Price capping is not the same rationing. Without more housing, the same number of people will be left without the house they desire.
Yeah, because we'd never seen a housing boom before 1996.
Think you fail at supply and demand.
Housing is not limitless.
No point owning multiple houses if you can't rent them as there's no one without a house.
Even if you take into account people wanting more than one house. Empty houses cost a lot to keep up, so you won't have everyone buying Holliday houses.
They've never been as bad as this one, we didn't have stories of highly paid professional couples being priced out of buying (or at least purchasing on a sensible level) pre 2000
The economic problem is "unlimited wants". People's desire for housing is limitless.
I'd have a house in every city if they were free.
The thing that prevents this is money. Wealth increases, prices go up.
The same mount of housing exists as it did 40 years ago. In fact, there's significantly more. Yet their's a housing crisis.
Why?