excreationist
Married mouth-breather
About 6 months ago I got a double-sided t-shirt printed to provoke conversations - a bit like Billboard Chris. I got it in blue to stand out more and I thought it being red (Labor) or green (the Greens) might turn some people off. But blue is the colour of the right-wing Coalition and they have some housing policies that I don't want to give the impression I support. Well I haven't worn it for many months. I had originally been thinking about going to the Brisbane CBD (where Billboard Chris got in trouble with the police). (and the state government parliament since I did this shortly before the state election).

A message I wrote on the internet:
Basically I think US house prices decreased a lot during the GFC and Australia's didn't. I think lower house prices means better affordability. I think affordability is more important than them being a good investment.
But the Australian housing minister seems to prefer housing being a secure investment rather than promoting affordability...
www.abc.net.au
Also from the link:
In the GFC apparently the housing price was part of a bubble. The housing minister wants there to be no bubble and just increase forever ("sustainably").
So she wants property to be a secure investment, unlike shares and owning a business.
BTW in Australia from about the 1970s to 2000 wages and house prices grew at about the same rate. Then after negative gearing and capital gains taxes were introduced, house prices increased a lot, and now house prices have doubled compared to wages. If house prices stopped increasing then there would be a chance for wages to catch up again. (though the median house price to median salary ratio has more than quadrupled)
As far as negative gearing and capital gains taxes goes, it allows rich people like surgeons and anaesthetists who earn about A$400k to reduce the taxes they pay by outbidding first home buyers and they're better off even if they make a loss (negative gearing).
So what is your opinion on housing affordability? Is it ok for prices to drop? Should they just keep on increasing? In Australia the Greens party wants the government to build affordable houses again like they did in the 1970s but property investors (like many politicians) want to get a good return on their investments i.e. become less affordable. The investors are so influential and powerful it seems houses might never become affordable again like they used to. If too many new houses are built the prices might start to drop and the housing minister never wants them to drop.

A message I wrote on the internet:
Basically I think US house prices decreased a lot during the GFC and Australia's didn't. I think lower house prices means better affordability. I think affordability is more important than them being a good investment.
But the Australian housing minister seems to prefer housing being a secure investment rather than promoting affordability...
Economists respond to minister insisting house prices shouldn't fall
Last month, Housing Minister Clare O'Neil told triple j that the government wasn't trying to bring down house prices. The interview found a new life online this week, so we asked the experts what they think.

Last month, Clare O'Neil told youth radio station triple j that young people might want house prices to drop but the government did not.
"We're not trying to bring down house prices," Housing Minister Clare O'Neil declared on ABC's youth radio station triple j.
"That may be the view of young people, [but] it's not the view of our government."
Instead, she insisted the federal government wanted "sustainable price growth".
Also from the link:
Economists have argued house prices should stand still, or perhaps even gradually fall
In the GFC apparently the housing price was part of a bubble. The housing minister wants there to be no bubble and just increase forever ("sustainably").
So she wants property to be a secure investment, unlike shares and owning a business.
BTW in Australia from about the 1970s to 2000 wages and house prices grew at about the same rate. Then after negative gearing and capital gains taxes were introduced, house prices increased a lot, and now house prices have doubled compared to wages. If house prices stopped increasing then there would be a chance for wages to catch up again. (though the median house price to median salary ratio has more than quadrupled)
As far as negative gearing and capital gains taxes goes, it allows rich people like surgeons and anaesthetists who earn about A$400k to reduce the taxes they pay by outbidding first home buyers and they're better off even if they make a loss (negative gearing).
So what is your opinion on housing affordability? Is it ok for prices to drop? Should they just keep on increasing? In Australia the Greens party wants the government to build affordable houses again like they did in the 1970s but property investors (like many politicians) want to get a good return on their investments i.e. become less affordable. The investors are so influential and powerful it seems houses might never become affordable again like they used to. If too many new houses are built the prices might start to drop and the housing minister never wants them to drop.
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