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French property for sale websites

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    #21
    Some of these properties in the south of France are just nuts. 8 bed villas for 10k

    And the rental on these types of property is 2k a week during peak

    So that's quite an ROI

    What's the catch I wonder
    Knock first as I might be balancing my chakras.

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      #22
      Your neighbours are MF and sas.

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        #23
        Originally posted by adubya View Post
        Your neighbours are MF and sas.
        Fook that
        Knock first as I might be balancing my chakras.

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          #24
          Its funny how a lot of these French properties remind me very strongly of Call of Duty.

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            #25
            Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
            ... I imagine one reason is the horrendous taxes those crazy French socialists must levy on larger properties and land.

            That must be why most French people prefer to live in shoeboxes in towns.
            That's puzzled me slightly for a long time, but I think I've sussed it now - It's their mad inheritance laws.

            In France, people are legally obliged to leave their property in equal shares to all their blood offspring (and presumably the same applies to foreign residents in France, something worth investigating if you are a British person with several children and thinking of buying a farmhouse in France!)

            It's an old tradition, and before the Revolution meant among other things that each child of a titled person inherited a title and land of their own, leading to a proliferation of petty aristocrats freeloading off the labours of the peasants, and to inefficiency in land management and farming that persists to this day in France (hence the CAP agricultural subsidies, which are mostly for their benefit).

            So these days for any French family with more than one kid, a country estate, or just a farm house with some land, spells Big Trouble as soon as one or both of the parents die. Apparently loads of country properties in France lie empty for years, decades sometimes, going to rack and ruin while the heirs squabble over who gets what. So no wonder French people tend to prefer several smaller, more easily shared, properties such as town flats.

            Often, with joint inheritance like that, the result is that all the heirs and their families end up occupying the same farm house, like a sort of commune. So it's hardly surprising that practically every remote village in France has several inbred mental defectives or cripples wandering about. We joke about rural people with six fingers and suchlike; but in France it is apparently a big problem.

            And all because of their daft inheritance laws, which on the face of it sound so fair and equitable - It's a good example of how, counterintuitively, a reasonable sounding system can actually have such malign results.

            In England and Wales we've traditionally had the Norman system of primogeniture, where the eldest (and usually male) heir inherited the lot. This prevented estates from being atomised with a resulting surfeit of small landowners to oppress the peasantry. It also meant younger siblings had to make their own way in life, and thus encouraged enterprise.
            Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

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              #26
              Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
              So no wonder French people tend to prefer several smaller, more easily shared, properties such as town flats.

              Often, with joint inheritance like that, the result is that all the heirs and their families end up occupying the same farm house, like a sort of commune. So it's hardly surprising that practically every remote village in France has several inbred mental defectives or cripples wandering about. We joke about rural people with six fingers and suchlike; but in France it is apparently a big problem.
              I think its ridiculous to suggest that people decide what size home to buy based on what happens to it when they are dead. Most people cant manage to live 3 months without a pay check so its preposterous to suggest they even consider what happens after their death. Dont most older people downsize as they approach retirement anyway?

              We have them here, not because of inbreeding but through leaving breeding too late. I bet there is a fair few parents on here with such children. This is through womens lib getting women to work, which meant property prices rose to need two people paying the mortgage, thus meaning it wasnt possible to have children in early 20s as always was the case before.

              As a society we have made an awful lot of mistakes, mostly unintended consequences of course.

              Comment


                #27
                Originally posted by escapeUK View Post
                ... I think its ridiculous to suggest that people decide what size home to buy based on what happens to it when they are dead. Most people cant manage to live 3 months without a pay check so its preposterous to suggest they even consider what happens after their death.
                I'm talking about French people with plenty of money, enough to buy a farm or something comparable in the UK, and suggesting the main reason they tend not to do that in France (unless they have only one blood heir).
                Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

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