Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Housing
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amateur51
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostNot as I see it. The "ownership" could be in the hands of a bank as a sort of collective Trust
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Postguarded under democratic control through electable officials who could be literally "brought to account".
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt wouldn't cost nearly as much as the duplication afforded by having numerous large banks such as the unaccountable ones still in existence that caused the 2008 crash, and no more compete on some Adam Smithian level playing field than do the multinational oligopolies in other areas that combine operations worldwide to keep prices high.Last edited by ahinton; 22-06-14, 16:03.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostHow would you assess that cost? Clearly, were all residential property not already in local authority hands to be acquired by local authorities, the affordability burden upon them for the acquisition alone (let alone subsequent management, maintenance, insurance and admistrative costs) would surely be intolerable; where would they borrow the kinds of sums to enable them to do this, even under a compulsory purchase situation? On top of that, were such compulsory purchase facility to be put into law, can you imagine the millions of legal challenges to it and the cost of meeting them all? Who would pay for that and with what?
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amateur51
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI gave as good an answer as I could to that question in my #54. I don't see any solutions to the housing problem for the forseeable future; if it gets much worst than it already is we will probably see a return of mass squatting.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI gave as good an answer as I could to that question in my #54. I don't see any solutions to the housing problem for the forseeable future; if it gets much worst than it already is we will probably see a return of mass squatting.Last edited by ahinton; 22-06-14, 17:05.
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostAt least we agree that the current situation is untenable, with fewer and fewer people being able to afford either to borrow to buy their homes or to rent them because their values mane unaffordable rents. I don;t know what can be done unless and until there is a balance between the value of housing and people's incomes, which is certainly far from the case right now.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostThe answer surely lies, in part at least, in increasing supply through local non-traditional methods as I have outlined.
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amateur51
A national working party on social housing creation is what's needed, looking at need, what's available, what needs renovating, what needs building, examples of local initiatives/ good practice, financial models, self-build, land provision, design etc etc.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostA national working party on social housing creation is what's needed, looking at need, what's available, what needs renovating, what needs building, examples of local initiatives/ good practice, financial models, self-build, land provision, design etc etc.
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostIf such an entity could reasonably be trusted to investigate and report honsetly and constructively, then yes, this could indeed be a good start; recognising that there really is a problem would be the only thrust for such a move, I think.
Sadly they were eventually persuaded by the lure of lucre to throw in their lot directly with Government and so we must start again.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostIt's how the Housing Association movement started in the 1960s in response to Cathy Come Home, Rachmanism and the race riots.
Sadly they were eventually persuaded by the lure of lucre to throw in their lot directly with Government and so we must start again.Last edited by ahinton; 23-06-14, 10:12.
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostOK - but where would you envisage the money coming from to acquire every piece - or at the very least the majority - of residential property not already in the hands of local authorities or housing associations? - or are you only advocating a smallish increased in the number of istanes of non-owner-occupied housing rather than replaing most or all of it with local authority and housing association ownership?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostBelieving as I do that housing its people is a government's responsibility, I say the money should come from government through taxation plus contributions from mutual Building Societies. We might even be truly imaginative & establish a new form of Savings Bond purely for housing develoment.
I don't believe that, with the best will in the world, a government could possibly afford to house all its citizens, especially if is to continue to provide healthcare, education and the rest for them; I share your belief to the extent that a government should take reasonable responsibility to try to house those citizens that cannot afford to house themselves, but it's not clear how easily that can be done either.
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut unless my assumption that only a very tiny proportion of UK residential property is currently owned by local authorities and housing associations, how on earth could increased taxation hope to fund the many squillions of pounds required to acquire all the rest that isn't? If mutual Building Societies (there aren't so many of them left and they're mostly not all that large, are they?) were to "contribute", they'd have to attract sufficient investors' funds in order to enable them to do so; likewise, the kind of Savings Bond that you suggest would have include either the possibility of attracting growth (if a pure investment) or interest (if a deposit fund) to encourage investors to invest in it - and all this money would likeise have tgo come from somewhere.
I don't believe that, with the best will in the world, a government could possibly afford to house all its citizens, especially if is to continue to provide healthcare, education and the rest for them; I share your belief to the extent that a government should take reasonable responsibility to try to house those citizens that cannot afford to house themselves, but it's not clear how easily that can be done either.
We need to set up a Housing Commission urgently and test some of the these ideas out and generate some new ones.
And yes there will be a seat for you from which you can suck your teeth, shake your head and wail ".. we'rrrre doomed ah tell ye, arrrll doomed!"
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWell we'll never get anything done if you persist with this Eeyore-ish attitude ahinton - to the bottom of the garden with you and eat some worms!
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWe need to set up a Housing Commission urgently and test some of the these ideas out and generate some new ones.
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostAnd yes there will be a seat for you from which you can suck your teeth, shake your head and wail ".. we'rrrre doomed ah tell ye, arrrll doomed!"
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