That's exactly what's happening, people are spending more and more on their rent, to unaffordable levels.
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Uh yes and that's a problem. Flatsharing is still fairly normal in your 20s but less common in the 30s. Now add the divorce rate.uziq wrote:
that basically describes the picture here for most millenials and younger. spending 60-70% of your income on overheads and rent/bills is more common than hitting that 30% sweetspot.
people don't live alone though. i'm not sure single-occupancy rates are majorly on the rise in the younger age brackets. most everyone i know house or flatshares.
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Yes and unfortunately I think you might be right. Selling prices right now are at records high, despite the pandemic. They've been skyrocketing the last 10 years esp.Dilbert_X wrote:
At that rate if you're serious about buying a house you're probably going backwards unfortunately.Larssen wrote:
I don't think I did say that? I am spending 30% on rent here and maybe 35% on that + utilities. I keep an excel sheet with all my expenditures. If I want to I can comfortably set aside 1k a month with that spending pattern.
So 35% includes utilities? I'm guessing you're one of those people who turns the heating on.
I could but move around too much. As I said, 2 years. Once again, I'm not primarily concerned or outraged on behalf of myself. I'm lucky. I know I'm lucky. I just feel pissed about a: the power position of rental agents and landlords, b: the market at large and the chances of average incomes to live comfortably, esp. if compared to previous generations.uziq wrote:
it's not really a problem for you, though. you could live somewhere cheaper and commute, like the vast majority of people do.
slightly confused why the city-centre single-occupancy is acting like life is terrible. it's a great way to live. even better if you can save 70% of your income while doing it. you're renting in a situation that is better than 99.99% of people.
you could eat the crap of commuting distance for a few years and save enough to get off the rental ladder forever? this seems to be the prudent mentality of many, many people who take the short-term hit to living quality
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It's not just about building housing but capping real estate to certain objective norms. Housing is a right.uziq wrote:
well, the good news is the centre-right nowhere in europe wants to build affordable housing.
Homes and properties in and around my area are constantly snapped up and flipped into expensive, low quality rentals. One of the office buildings I was at for awhile tested like 80% bad on the outlets, so I had to keep figuratively slapping wrists when people were trying to relocate expensive computer equipment to faulty sockets. Buying price was like 3.5x what I'd seen it at before some out-of-state toad snapped it up. Property prospecting can be such a cancer sometimes.uziq wrote:
i am really not in support of landlordism or the rentier class, especially the type that snapped up public housing stock with cheap loans/buy offs in the 80s and have contributed nothing since ... but basic precautions in a renting agreement do make sense. in return, you should expect to be able to ask equally as much of them.
rental agents can get fucked, no question. a law was recently introduced here that stopped them introducing exorbitant fees as the middle-man. £300 or £750 or whatever for photocopying a few sheets and making a phone call on a renters’ behalf to confirm the lease. fuck offfff.
If you want to be in property the thing to do may be buy somewhere, rent it out, continue renting wherever you are as you move around.Larssen wrote:
Yes and unfortunately I think you might be right. Selling prices right now are at records high, despite the pandemic. They've been skyrocketing the last 10 years esp.Dilbert_X wrote:
At that rate if you're serious about buying a house you're probably going backwards unfortunately.Larssen wrote:
I don't think I did say that? I am spending 30% on rent here and maybe 35% on that + utilities. I keep an excel sheet with all my expenditures. If I want to I can comfortably set aside 1k a month with that spending pattern.
So 35% includes utilities? I'm guessing you're one of those people who turns the heating on.
The govt has to rent the lowest value housing to put migrants in, thus locking out locals and bumping up their rents, and making social housing less available to them.SuperJail Warden wrote:
What role does immigration have in housing inflation? I know it isn't their fault for the financialization of housing but it also can't help that migration within the E.U. is easy and also 15% of people in the U.S..are foreign born..
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