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First-time buyers and the Housing Fury

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Wednesday December 11, 2002 10:21author by Toner Quinnauthor email editor at thejmi dot com Report this post to the editors

How housing is out of control

This article was published in The Irish Times, Monday 18 November 2002

The Housing Fury
by Toner Quinn

A few weeks before the new millennium, myself and my girlfriend moved back to Ireland from Scotland. In our mid-twenties, and expecting our first child, we were tempted back by the thought of having family support and our friends around us. And at the back of our mind was all this talk of something called the Celtic Tiger, which we thought, at the very least, couldn’t do our chances any harm. For twelve months we lived in a room in my mother’s house, then – in a strike for independence – for two months in a miserable one-bedroom flat (at 580 punts a month), then six months minding my sister’s house while she was abroad, and since then we’re renting a two-bedroom house belonging to a relative, thus making it affordable. We have stopped looking to buy a house. We try to block out the subject. If it does surface in conversation, we inevitably circle around emigration as a solution.

On a scale of the fortunes of today’s young Irish, we are the lucky ones, simply because our family were in the position to bale us out. But that doesn’t mean I don’t feel enraged at the circumstances in which many young Irish find themselves. Leafing through property pages and seeing houses for d300,000 or more, and realising that your society implicitly expects you to try and purchase that house leaves one speechless. You try and reason that even an iota of business acumen would tell you it is not a smart move to invest when your salary is d20,000 to d30,000. But the older generation frown and tell you that it was the same when they were our age, that they too had to stretch themselves. But ten times or more your salary? The banks tell us you should be aiming towards 3.5 times your salary! We seem to be speaking completely different languages, and living in entirely different worlds.

Estate agents backed up by politicians, regularly stating that it is ‘a good time for first time buyers’, leave young people blank. The Government makes noises about social housing, but shows no real sense of urgency, certainly not equal to the panic that is out there. Their slavish following of the economics of the free market has shown up their staleness, their lack of imagination. Parents with their children still living at home because of housing prices showed incredible patience by voting this Government back in.
The young Irish are demonstrating fury at the abolishment of the d3,800 First Time Buyers Grant, but not purely because of the monetary loss. Their anger has been building up for years, and it is not only to do with housing. They have become weary of the conflicting messages that their society has been sending them. They are told they are educated and confident, and have the right to strive for much more in life, and yet they shouldn’t expect a home. They are told they are a generation who are imbued with a new confidence in their Irishness and their country, but they are still expected to be servile to the absolutes of the free market and understand that its demands on Ireland must come first.

Some young Irish rang up the Gerry Ryan radio show last Friday morning. They fumed and they screamed, but the chasm that exists between the generations was painfully evident. Gerry actually laughed. When you no longer feel the stress of having no home, no security, you quickly forget what it is like. The airwaves were seized by older home-owners giving out to the young for spending all their money on drink and not trying hard enough to buy a house. Again, the young Irish listening to this were speechless.

It is common for the older generation that rule the airwaves and the national newspapers to proclaim that all the stifling characteristics of Irish society have been swept away. But in exchange for sweeping away all that they hated as young people the ruling generation have bought into the absolute logic of the free market, and in the 1990s were in the perfect position to reap the benefits of it. Their houses are now worth fortunes. They can hardly be anything but delighted. But the young Irish haven’t seen those benefits of the free market. They see an Ireland led by brainlessness and naivety in the face of market economics. They are bewildered by the notion that the ruling generation think there is a future in all of this. The atrocious housing situation, whereby the young Irish have been priced out of the market to a degree that could never have been imagined, is only a symptom of a future in Ireland that the young are dreading, but that the older generation seem oblivious to.

Toner Quinn works in publishing in Dublin.

author by Raypublication date Wed Dec 11, 2002 10:41author address author phone Report this post to the editors

This article is a month old, and has already been published in the Irish Times. You're pushing original news off the newswire.

author by Markospublication date Wed Dec 11, 2002 18:14author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Water, Food, Shelter. The three basic needs. This government has all but disenfranchised a whole generation of Irish citizens for the sake of Builders and Investor's profits. For many of us, this is one of the biggest issues of the day and one which has the potential to bring down the government.

The article that was posted was one of the more cogent crystallisations of anger over this issue in recent weeks and I for one am pleased to see it posted here.

author by xpublication date Thu Dec 12, 2002 01:04author address author phone Report this post to the editors

(although if its so important why not research and WRITE an article instead of reposting one)

Irish society is in the process of being divided between those with property and those without. Those without property will spend large parts of their lives working for those who have property.

Actually, this is already happenning. A couple who get up at 6am to get stuck into a 1 1/2 hour commute will spend a large part of their lives working not to pay for their house but to pay for their house PLUS the speculative profit of the property-owner they bought the house from.

Of course, tenants often have it worse, since they have far fewer rights or protections than the mortgage slaves and must pay as much if not more for their accommodation.

At the moment most of the activity in the housing market is between first time buyers and investors. Government policy is increasingly behind the investors. Keep in mind that few of these property investors are investing in new rental properties - mostly they are buying up the housing stock.

Everybody needs a place to live and so those who own property own people as well.

What's the solution?

author by Raypublication date Thu Dec 12, 2002 09:57author address author phone Report this post to the editors

"(although if its so important why not research and WRITE an article instead of reposting one)"

author by SMurF0 - The Organisation for Disorganisationpublication date Thu Dec 12, 2002 22:23author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Housing is the biggest load of crap in this country.

FF are making us bend over and fucking us up the arse with their propaganda bollox about 'a fair budget'. Yeah, tell that to the poor sods who can't get a house because you put so many financial barriers in their way.

VOTE OUT FF GOBSHITES!!!

 
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