- 21.1.17 14:51
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Aha, tie kas sagrābuši tad tik tupēs kā suņi, un zobus rādīs tiem, kas palikuši bez. Pastāsti to visiem kas bez zemes, bez privātmājas, jo cenas ir ārpus sasniegšanas.
Anglija, privātīpašuma svētnīca (kur pie tam īres tirgu ir neeksistējošs, t.i., īrēt nozīme dzīvot kā pritonā):
"Fast-rising house prices are forcing home buyers to stretch their mortgage terms up to 40 years to get a foothold on the property ladder,"
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/oct/09/first-time-buyers-stretching-h ouse-prices-mortgage-repayments-property-l adder
"A few streets away from their first home, it cost them £165,000. It is now worth between £1.1 and £1.3m.
[..] an entire generation of 50-somethings who were fortunate enough, in the 1970s or 1980s, to be able to buy a small flat in London and who are now, as a direct result, property millionaires."
"in the 1970s the typical first-time buyer was 25; now, just 8% of 25-year-olds own their own homes. Meanwhile, a tenth of all 55- to 64-year-olds live in households with net property wealth of £500,000 plus."
"Homebuyers now have to save for up to 24 years to set aside a deposit large enough to buy them a foot on Britain’s housing ladder, according to new research."
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/dec/20/uk-home-buyers-save-24-years-h ousing-ladder-deposit-study
"House price rises of 5% a year and a shortage of affordable homes are set to swell the ranks of “generation rent” over the next decade, so that by 2025 more than half of those under 40 will be living in properties owned by private landlords."
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/jul/22/pwc-report-generation-rent-to-g row-over-next-decade
"Rocketing house prices and years without real-terms wages growth have prompted a growing number of younger people to give up the idea of ever owning their own home,"
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/apr/07/young-people-uk-increasingly-g iving-up-owning-home-halifax-survey
"The number of young adults able to buy homes could fall nearly 50% within five years unless the government addresses the housing shortage, a report has claimed. Over the past decade, home ownership among 25-34-year-olds has dropped by a third, from 1.8m to 1.2m, and analysis by the housing charity Shelter published on Friday suggests that if current trends continue, the number of young homeowners will drop to about 616,600 by the end of this parliament. This would mean that less than 20% in that age group would have made it on to the property ladder, compared with nearly 60% a decade ago."
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/may/22/housing-crisis-halve-young-hom eowners
"Almost 60% of 20- to 39-year-olds in England will rent their homes by 2025, while just 26% will have got on the housing ladder, research shows."
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/nov/17/generation-rent-young-adults-h ousing-ladder-2025