What can the government do about it? Not very much. We don't live in a command economy where the Kommisar works out how many shoes, houses, or cars the citizens will need each year. It's a market economy, driven by supply and demand, and lubricated by the banks. Unless and until something drastic changes that, I can't see how it will change. — Wayfarer
But I don't know how you would go about it. I mean, you can build public housing - we have that here too, but it's reserved for those who are permanently disadvantaged. I mean, you wouldn't want to live in it. You can't cap prices. And if you give subsidies - that's been tried here, also - then it just drives the prices up.
Here in Oz, we have a particular tax law called Negative Gearing, which means you can write off costs associated with investment properties. That has been accused of artificially inflating the housing market, but at the last election, the Opposition said they would wind back negative gearing, and the Government (who won by 1 seat) then accused them of trying to 'torpedo the value of the family home'. Result: nothing changed, as usual. Other than that, there's a lot of chest-beating and faux sympathy from the politicians, but what can they actually do? It's a devilishly difficult policy problem. — Wayfarer
The obsession with buying up property or keeping property purely as an investment doesn't help. There are over half a million empty properties in the UK. The government should have a moral responsibility to stop this practice. — bassplayer
So, I look to the private renting sector. But, as I said, there's a critical shortage of homes to rent. So, create more? Make them affordable? Make housing benefit work for people in my situation and similar situations? Increase the minimum wage? Intervene more. — Sapientia
The problem with the private sector is that it's up to the landlords to determine the rent and whether or not to accept people on benefits, and given the demand they're obviously going to try to get as much money as they can and from people with a job.
Unless the government decides to regulate this sort of thing and enforce maximum prices based on location (and make it illegal to refuse people on benefits), but then the landlords might decide that selling the property is the better option for them, and so they might be bought by those who plan to live there rather than rent it out. — Michael
The problem with the private sector is that it's up to the landlords to determine the rent and whether or not to accept people on benefits, and given the demand they're obviously going to try to get as much money as they can and from people with a job.
Unless the government decides to regulate this sort of thing and enforce maximum prices based on location (and make it illegal to refuse people on benefits), but then the landlords might decide that selling the property is the better option for them, and so they might be bought by those who plan to live there rather than rent it out. — Michael
A home is no longer a place to live in but a market commodity, hence the silly property shows on TV etc. The overwhelming influence of the limited interests of economists and marketers has become destructive for our societies.. . has developed over the decades between 1980 and 2010, in which financial leverage tended to override capital (equity), and financial markets tended to dominate over the traditional industrial economy and agricultural economics. — Wikipedia
The point of this discussion is to discuss why this is, what can be done about it - particularly what the government can do about it - and why this hasn't already been done.
Frequently reported in the news and mentioned on political programs is the severe lack of affordable housing. At least here in the U.K., but I expect it's a similar situation elsewhere as well. In recent years, house building in general reached its lowest level since the 1920s (in 2010, with 112,000 homes being built across England and Wales), and hasn't improved by much since then (in 2015, this increased to 149,000). — Sapientia
The other solution is to get a better job. — Hanover
The other solution is to get a better job. I know it sounds so American of me, but when there's a problem, how about looking within for the solution instead of asking for help. I'd have sympathy if you had one arm or half a brain, but you're fully intact, fully capable, just unwilling. Take a job that stresses you, annoys you, pains you, challenges you and your reward is a two bedroom apartment as opposed to a one room flat. If you don't want the job I've proposed, at least accept your one room flat as what you earned. — Hanover
Be careful, there. I can just see your little corner of paradise being over-run and ruined by a plague of tourists, developers, builders, summer people--marauders all--coming to trash the place. — Bitter Crank
...fantastic sums spent on benefits which go to landlords. — mcdoodle
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