What scrutiny do these kinds of places come under? There was a chap on American television talking about how he owns 30,000 homes and the outrage was palpable.42, don't own a house. I live in Vienna, house ownership is really not very common here (7%)
presuming renting is completely different there? more protections etc? and prices how are they?42, don't own a house. I live in Vienna, house ownership is really not very common here (7%)
presuming renting is completely different there? more protections etc? and prices how are they?
Yep it's incomparable really.presuming renting is completely different there? more protections etc? and prices how are they?
This is substantially nonsense, and it gets pushed out ALL the time.Buying is lot less common in mainland Europe than in the UK. British people have a weird obsession with buying a house without doing an assessment on the various impacts (restricted social mobility limiting salaries, over concentration of investments in the domestic market, etc.).
This is substantially nonsense, and it gets pushed out ALL the time.
Have a look
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_home_ownership_rate
France, Spain, Belgium, Italy, Ireland, Poland..... all higher owner-occupier rates than the UK.
It's only really Germany who are lower, and its not by all that much. Coincidentally, they have MUCH stronger tenant rights laws, too.
This is substantially nonsense, and it gets pushed out ALL the time.
Have a look
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_home_ownership_rate
France, Spain, Belgium, Italy, Ireland, Poland..... all higher owner-occupier rates than the UK.
It's only really Germany who are lower, and its not by all that much. Coincidentally, they have MUCH stronger tenant rights laws, too.
Only really Germany and Austria and Denmark and Turkey and Switzerland you mean?This is substantially nonsense, and it gets pushed out ALL the time.
Have a look
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_home_ownership_rate
France, Spain, Belgium, Italy, Ireland, Poland..... all higher owner-occupier rates than the UK.
It's only really Germany who are lower, and its not by all that much. Coincidentally, they have MUCH stronger tenant rights laws, too.
Only really Germany of any significance. Turkey not really Europe.Only really Germany and Austria and Denmark and Turkey and Switzerland you mean?
TBH you've left a gap which is non-HMO reasonable rentals. It should be the case that at 18/21 it's possible to move out of your parents and into a house share (non-HMO, just 2 or 3 mates etc) and sustain yourself. Then eventually even rent a flat or gasp, house. Problem is that renting costs so much more than owning a house. Isn't that crazy? That people are pushed towards ownership because renting bleeds them dry?Am sure we'll see more and more people living with parents for longer and longer as house prices and rents go up while other costs of living also balloon and wages in many sectors fail to keep up. Unsuitable HMOs becoming the only other option for many more people that want to move out, even for those with decent jobs.
TBH you've left a gap which is non-HMO reasonable rentals. It should be the case that at 18/21 it's possible to move out of your parents and into a house share (non-HMO, just 2 or 3 mates etc) and sustain yourself. Then eventually even rent a flat or gasp, house. Problem is that renting costs so much more than owning a house. Isn't that crazy? That people are pushed towards ownership because renting bleeds them dry?
At least in London, living alone carries such a hefty premium that it's just not viable. Compare my rent in a shared house - just over 600pcm, if I lived alone a 1 bed flat would be MINIMUM 800 but really 1000. 2 bed flats would be 1300-1400 easily.
Whereas at my budget I could be buying a 2 bed flat of my own and the mortgage would be £500. Absolutely bonkers.
I think it's ok that rent should be a part of normal cost of living. Go to work, earn money, income provides the means to support yourself. Buying property should be something above that you have to achieve - but actually it's more like an escape from the trap of renting. Weird.