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500 sq feet, and a finished basement apartment
I was going by the article.
The bungalow only has one bedroom on the main floor and is no more than 1,000-square feet.
500 sq feet, and a finished basement apartment
The bungalow only has one bedroom on the main floor and is no more than 1,000-square feet.
I had to quadruple take when I was reading it, first at the authors disdain for 1000sqft bungalow with finished basement, then at how small the main floor looked, then at how we're to get a 1000 sqft footprint on 24x36.I was going by the article.
the sq. ftg includes the basement so you are actually getting half that with an equivalent half finished in the basement to rent out or so basic math tells meI had to quadruple take when I was reading it, first at the authors disdain for 1000sqft bungalow with finished basement, then at how small the main floor looked, then at how we're to get a 1000 sqft footprint on 24x36.
On one side that place is tiny and 600k seems crazy to me. On the other, 1000 sqft of living space is 1000 sqft, does it matter that it's like this, a bungalow on a pad, or a condo?
See post 880the sq. ftg includes the basement so you are actually getting half that with an equivalent half finished in the basement to rent out or so basic math tells me
But everybody needs a roof over their heads.The only thing that can correct the housing problem is the buyers and renters. As long as real estate agents and land lords can get ridiculous rents and mortgages they will keep them that high.
just over 15 kilometres away from downtown Toronto
Agree.It [eliminating blind bidding] won't fix the problem, but every little bit helps.
Everyone in the first few deciles will have homes. If there aren't enough of the kind of homes people want for the money they have, though, they will look further down - buy and renovate or demolish/build. This moves "affordable" properties out of reach of the people lower on the scale. Unless the demand of the top tiers is saturated, we can assume this is happening.The "ones" have homes. They will always have homes. There isn't enough for the 10's through 6's? 5's? 4's though.
Unlikely. "Creative destruction" doesn't take a holiday. Oddball businesses that are viable today become non-viabl and the workers are freed up to work elsewhere. The only things at risk are Ponzi social welfare schemes, and it's in the power of legislatures to recalibrate those.we risk complete economic collapse. We need working age people to keep the lights on and the wheels turning while the boomers retire.
Another factor is people living alone. I'd be curious to see how the numbers have changed over the past three or four decades.
The economic collapse which is coming soon will correct it. Prices are simply too high to sustain the status quo. We have gone too long without small corrections, basically done everything we could to prevent them. Soon we shall have no choice but to pay the piper and all the negatives that come with it.The only thing that can correct the housing problem is the buyers and renters. As long as real estate agents and land lords can get ridiculous rents and mortgages they will keep them that high.
But everybody needs a roof over their heads.
And most people prefer their own private roof.
Demand.
I completely agree with you.The economic collapse which is coming soon will correct it. Prices are simply too high to sustain the status quo. We have gone too long without small corrections, basically done everything we could to prevent them. Soon we shall have no choice but to pay the piper and all the negatives that come with it.
Each of my parents have their retirement plans tired into the equity in their homes, and if that equity just magically isn't there all of a sudden, it will cripple their ability to feel safe in their retirement. (Both of my parents are in their 70's, and both work casual/part time jobs already...a sudden loss of equity will destroy them financially)
(I blame greedy landlords for a lot of this problem moreso than anybody else. And not all landlords, who simply charge what they think they can get...I blame the dickheads that raised rents in the first place, causing other landlords to follow suit)
I blame greedy landlords for a lot of this problem moreso than anybody else.
I am fortunate enough to have bought a house before the nonsense price increases. I am basically living a 1950s Canadian dream lifestyle at the moment, single income household, fairly cheap mortgage, and decent standard of living.I completely agree with you.
From my own perspective & position in life... On the one hand, I desperately hope the housing bubble bursts and prices come crashing down because at the rate things have been going over the last few years, I'll never be able to get into the housing market. And I DON'T want to be $400k+ in debt just to own a decent place to live in a decent area. (Even in the crappier areas, prices come close to that)
I work with a lot of people & know a lot of people who work full time jobs, aren't overly sloppy spenders, keep our credit rating in good standing - and who will never own their own home at this rate.
On the other hand, I don't want the housing bubble to crash suddenly and violently (which I'm afraid seems to be what will happen.)
Each of my parents have their retirement plans tired into the equity in their homes, and if that equity just magically isn't there all of a sudden, it will cripple their ability to feel safe in their retirement. (Both of my parents are in their 70's, and both work casual/part time jobs already...a sudden loss of equity will destroy them financially)
And I feel like a lot of our folks are in the same boat
Plus it isn't fair that an entire generation of people who have worked hard, paid off chunks of their mortgage, and have been able to help their kids as they grew up & moved away end up screwed out of their own peace of mind in the end...
But if the bubble doesn't get deflated at least somewhat, or burst altogether, I don't see how what is happening now can be sustainable.
(I blame greedy landlords for a lot of this problem moreso than anybody else. And not all landlords, who simply charge what they think they can get...I blame the dickheads that raised rents in the first place, causing other landlords to follow suit)
They have defined benefit pensions for the most part (which they then cancelled for future generations), made much more money in terms of value over their careers (and had access much better paying secure jobs),
I think that's a question of the scale of the crash. Lot's of boomer/older x age people planned to retire off the equity in their homes. But were they planning on the post 2019 explosion? Does a crash to 2018 prices jeopardize their retirement, or clawback an unplanned for windfall?On the other hand, I don't want the housing bubble to crash suddenly and violently (which I'm afraid seems to be what will happen.)
Each of my parents have their retirement plans tired into the equity in their homes, and if that equity just magically isn't there all of a sudden, it will cripple their ability to feel safe in their retirement. (Both of my parents are in their 70's, and both work casual/part time jobs already...a sudden loss of equity will destroy them financially)