Housing Bubble Ready To Pop

and now for some right-wing propaganda;

 

Housing price bubble headed for unemployment ‘pop’

 

Australia’s property bubble is coming to land on a very sharp pin—the sharp increase in national unemployment.

 

Although the Australian Bureau of Statistics reported official unemployment held steady for the month of December, at 5.8 per cent, it recorded a plunge in the participation rate to 64.6 per cent.

 

That is, only 64.6 per cent of people of working age are active in the workforce, either working or looking for work.

 

When the participation rate falls, it is usually because job-seekers give up looking for work, at which time they are no longer counted in the unemployment statistics.

 

If the participation rate today was the same as the average in 2011—65.5 per cent—the official unemployment rate would already be 7.1 per cent.

 

And that’s just official unemployment, not real unemployment. For example, the ABS counts people who work as little as one hour per week as employed.

 

The Roy Morgan research company conducts its own monthly unemployment survey, using different parameters, including not counting people who work only one hour per week as employed. Roy Morgan reports the current unemployment rate is 10.7 per cent!

The Roy Morgan figure is usually 2-3 per cent higher than the official figure, but in recent times it has climbed much faster, reflecting the constant announcements of job losses in major industries and businesses.

 

Who will pay the mortgages?

 

Australia’s property bubble has been fully stretched for a long time, balancing precariously on the backs of the working families struggling to service their massive household debts.

Australian household debt to disposable income is more than 150 per cent.

 

A single percentage of increase in unemployment is in the order of 100,000 people, many of whom will have mortgages.

 

Houses are already priced out of reach of most first home buyers, so in recent times most of the buyers of property have been small investors. Recent analysis by UBS showed that 57 per cent of property investors are in debt, and are low-to-mid..., vulnerable to rising unemployment.

 

When the workers, whose mortgage payments service the banks’ obligations, can no longer carry the burden, the Australian banks will crash as dramatically as their counterparts in the other countries whose economies were dominated by property, including Spain and Ireland.

 

Read More Here

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Re: Housing Bubble Ready To Pop

And a happy day to you too Icy..............Woman Tongue

 

 

Just what I needed to cheer me up!

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Re: Housing Bubble Ready To Pop

sorry Gilly Heart

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Icy,  I don't understand why you have called this "right wing propaganda", the cost of house's in a lot (not all) of Australia, has for a long time been way to high.

Older people have told me many times that house's used to cost about the average yearly wage, now in most places it's often at the very least 5 times (usually more) the average yearly wage.

 

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Re: Housing Bubble Ready To Pop


@boris1gary wrote:

Icy,  I don't understand why you have called this "right wing propaganda", the cost of house's in a lot (not all) of Australia, has for a long time been way to high.

Older people have told me many times that house's used to cost about the average yearly wage, now in most places it's often at the very least 5 times (usually more) the average yearly wage.

 


Did you click through the link?

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Re: Housing Bubble Ready To Pop

In 1974 my husbands yearly net income was $8,840.-

We bought a large three bedroom house, built on a quater acer block for $7,500.-, and we had to have a 20% deposit before we got a loan from the Bank.

 

Today, someone on an income of $60,000 can hardly afford to buy a house.

 

Times have changed alright, but in many ways not for the betterment.

 

Erica

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Re: Housing Bubble Ready To Pop

yes I did.Woman Very Happy

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It's OK when your marriage fails due to the financial hardship from trying to save to buy your own home, you can get a $200 voucher for counselling.

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Re: Housing Bubble Ready To Pop

Prices must have jumped fairly fast, lind.

 

My brother and sil bought their first house about 1980, in the then outer area of Brisbane, Strathpine.  It was about $30,000 and a 1/4 acre block in the same area was about $6000 to $8000.

 

A big increase in a few years but I guess it also depends on location.

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Re: Housing Bubble Ready To Pop


@icyfroth wrote:

@boris1gary wrote:

Icy,  I don't understand why you have called this "right wing propaganda", the cost of house's in a lot (not all) of Australia, has for a long time been way to high.

Older people have told me many times that house's used to cost about the average yearly wage, now in most places it's often at the very least 5 times (usually more) the average yearly wage.

 


Did you click through the link?


now if I had posted that link I would have been crucified. 

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