Originally posted by original PM
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Reply to: The housing boom isn't a deep problem?
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Previously on "The housing boom isn't a deep problem?"
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Originally posted by TykeMerc View PostSo you bought at the top of the market and paid too much.
More fool you then.
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Originally posted by original PM View PostSo that would be like what??
A tenner??
Oddly I can charge someone that stays there 200% more than I did 10 years ago.
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Originally posted by scooterscot View PostI could sell my house in Glasgow for about 8-10% more than i paid for it 10 years ago. Useless.
A tenner??
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I could sell my house in Glasgow for about 8-10% more than i paid for it 10 years ago. Useless.
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thing is though doesn't one of the laws of economics tell us that the value of something is actually what someone else will pay for it?
so if salaries stay level then house prices cannot really go up because no one can afford them...
so they either come down or they get subsidised.
....
I have no idea.
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Originally posted by Doggy Styles View Post"Of some 14,823 applicants who have used the equity loan arm of the scheme, 77% of these people lived outside London and the South East. This dispels the myth that the scheme is fuelling the London housing bubble because clearly other regions of the country are seeing the most benefit. "
It is fuelling the bubble everywhere.
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"Of some 14,823 applicants who have used the equity loan arm of the scheme, 77% of these people lived outside London and the South East. This dispels the myth that the scheme is fuelling the London housing bubble because clearly other regions of the country are seeing the most benefit. "
It is fuelling the bubble everywhere.
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The housing boom isn't a deep problem?
The housing boom isn
George Osborne has been under increasing pressure to review the Help to Buy scheme, as it has been branded as the catalyst for a ‘housing bubble’. But we really hope that the chancellor does not bow under pressure, as Help to Buy is proving to be of huge benefit to contractors throughout the country, and particularly outside London. Of some 14,823 applicants who have used the equity loan arm of the scheme, 77% of these people lived outside London and the South East. This dispels the myth that the scheme is fuelling the London housing bubble because clearly other regions of the country are seeing the most benefit.Tags: None
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