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Lock up your lattes, the housing revolution is coming! : Comments
By Emma Davidson, published 10/5/2012Housing affordability is not only about owners and buyers, but renters too.
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Side by side with those low cost loans, was regularly rolled out low rent govt housing, built to a very high standard; that virtually guaranteed a useful maintainable life of fifty plus years, which enabled the income earned as CPI linked rent to completely repay any outlays; and indeed, in the latter years produce significant profits.
Moreover, the houses could be purchased by renters after a relatively short period, say five years, with half of the rent declared a reasonable deposit, and one of those very low cost govt loans taking care of the balance.
Very small private firms of say three or four employees could tender for contracts; and often worked for little more than wages; given the fierce competition during economic downturns etc.
And while this caused much grumbling and limited the numerous construction firms; it kept them from becoming too big to fail.
Nonetheless it kept them alive and well; entirely independant self-employed contractors; and, reasonably comparatively comfortable; given they usually had half a dozen houses in various stages of construction and similar number of forward contracts.
House frames had to weather for around six months to ensure that all the movement caused by timber maturation and drying out had ceased; meaning, there'd likely be no cracks or sagging in the finished quality product to fix?
There was a very long queue for these houses and waiting times of up to two years? [Grumble mumble grumble; the grumble useless gumment.]
Oh, if only we could limit waiting times for potential and affordable housing to just two years!
Some of these as proposed very low cost loans, could be used here; to reverse price gouged rents grafted by ultra greedy landlords, in places like Darwin and some of the mining communities, where rents as high as $2,000.00 a week are not uncommon! Rhrosty.