What a lot of rot.numbercruncher said:I sure do think that young people should be able to afford an average Home, 100pc i believe that ...
Obviously you dont believe young people should be able to afford an average home?
Tell me when you where in your 20s could you afford a average home? I sure could, each generation SHOULD be better off than the previous generation, You and your parents got to ride the Post War dream, the average young Aussie now gets to Surf one of the largest asset bubbles in History.
Can you seriously not see the imbalance, only 10 years ago a wage of 43k would service the average home, its now 110k, Xers and Yers on average have been denied what you took for granted.
I can forsee boatloads of animosity and anger in Australian society in the coming decades from Xers and Yers, average wages aren't going to go up to 110k ever, and imagine the Inflation if they did, it would actually be hyperinflation.
Only one solution, pop this Realestate bubble just like its popping in the US now, and increase lending standards to take speculators out of this over inflated market and ideally increase interest rates to 10pc +.
That pretty well says it all.
Julia said:Oh dear, Number Cruncher, you poor thing! How disadvantaged and miserable you are.
Julia said:I'm a baby boomer. I won't bore you with the hardships I've overcome, as did most of my friends. .
Julia said:What I will say, is that we had a hugely different attitude than your generation. .
Julia said:We understood that standing around whining wouldn't get us anywhere, and I'd support the member who suggested some of us actually got involved in the building of our own homes. We did when I first got married..
Julia said:And I simply fail to see what's different about baby boomers as a generation in terms of this report. My parents, grandparents, and great grandparents all, in their 50's, owned their own homes outright and had some savings..
Julia said:The difference might be that they didn't go through their young lives throwing money around on Ipods, designer clothes and expensive entertainment..
Julia said:Sorry, folks, I didn't intend to get on the "things were better in my day" routine, but I'm just mightily tired of some of the Gen X's and Y's constantly whining about how tough their lives are. Get over it and get on with it.
Julia..
Julia said:Glad to see some, e.g. Professor Frink, have a more realistic attitude.
Wouldn't mind betting this individual is taking steps to provide for his future.
numbercruncher said:I sure do think that young people should be able to afford an average Home, 100pc i believe that ...
Obviously you dont believe young people should be able to afford an average home?
Tell me when you where in your 20s could you afford a average home?
I sure could, each generation SHOULD be better off than the previous generation, You and your parents got to ride the Post War dream, the average young Aussie now gets to Surf one of the largest asset bubbles in History.
Can you seriously not see the imbalance, only 10 years ago a wage of 43k would service the average home, its now 110k, Xers and Yers on average have been denied what you took forgranted.
I can forsee boatloads of animosity and anger in Australian society in the coming decades from Xers and Yers, average wages aren't going to go upto 110k ever, and imagine the Inflation if they did, it would actually be hyperinflation.
Only one solution, pop this Realestate bubble just like its popping in the US now, and increase lending standards to take speculators out of this over inflated market and ideally increase interest rates to 10pc +.
nioka said:What a lot of rot.
Everything you have said on this thread so far.numbercruncher said:Come on just what is alot of Rot?
nioka said:Everything you have said on this thread so far.
Just out of curiousity, I had a look at the worst suburb I could think of within a reasonable commute of Perth (50min commute). The cheapest house I could find in this cheap, dangerous & dodgy housing commission type suburb was $240,000. Interest on that alone is approximately $19kpa. Your average office worker type is earning, say, $40kpa gross. I don't know of a bank that will lend even enough money to buy what is the cheapest home in the dodgiest suburb (I put some numbers thru some home loan calculators to substantiate that).moses said:I built my average home in my early 30's. My first house was an old one bedroom cottage that badly needed renovating (which we did).
Renting is becoming harder and harder too. The majority of people in the 18-28 age bracket have been priced out of the market, meaning the demand for rentals has been going through the roof. Even if you do manage to find one, expect to be paying a hefty premium for it.moses said:Sorry, we didn't take owning a home for granted. It was a major challenge, requiring major sacrifices.
Irrelevant. The baby boomer generation holds the votes and hence forces the governments to restrict the supply of land to maintain elevated housing prices (as all the baby boomers wealth is generally tied up in property). I can't speak for other states, but there are generally people camping out for blocks in/around Perth or some kind of auction/raffle system held. All the land is taken or being held by the government. Current home buyers cannot control what houses were built on these blocks...moses said:And incidently, the average home then was half the size of the average home today, with half the bathrooms.
1) And teleport to work?moses said:Ho Hum.
Other solutions include:-
1) live in the country, buy a cheaper than average house
2) buy a smaller than average house
3) buy a cheaper than average house
4) buy a grotty old house cheap and renovate when you can afford it
5) work harder; take on a 2nd job, run a business, work night shifts
6) rent out your first home
7) live longer with parents
Without exception, everyone here from Gen X/Y are here at ASF because they want to a good start and manage money effectively from an early age. I haven't seen any gen x/y's demanding laws to bring down property prices or anything like that. But I'm also yet to see any baby boomers suggest that with the likes of negative gearing they're mortgaging their children's future for their current lifestyle.moses said:Everybody gotta start somewhere, and not even GenX/Y get to start at average.
moses said:When young people have an average wage, borne from average experience and average skills, they will afford an average home. But they won't be young people anymore, most will be of average age.
Good to see you're making some well informed comments and aren't getting personal about itnumbercruncher said:They sure do, you guys should hook up and smoke some $100 bills together and ponder what the poor people are upto today huh?Julia said:Glad to see some, e.g. Professor Frink, have a more realistic attitude.
Wouldn't mind betting this individual is taking steps to provide for his future.
Lucky said:numbercruncher were you unloved as a child? didn't you get enough attention from mummy and daddy?
If you want to blame someone for all your ills and woes blame your folks mate, cause it certainly sounds like they're the root cause of all your problems.
Kimosabi said:Well I think we should lead a revolution and refuse to buy the Baby Boomers over-inflated assets. Don't go after the prices, let the prices come to you...
I think NSW and Vic are about six months to a year behind the US Property Bust and WA, Queensland and NT will be about 1 - 2 years.
If it wasn't for the commodities boom, Australia would be in recession.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?