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dendownunderswife 25 Nov 14 5.56pm | |
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I'd love to move to London.
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Anerley-Fried-Eagle Fake Beckenham actually 03 Dec 14 11.51am | |
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This has been one of the biggest issues in this country for at least 2 generations now and the sh*t is only now hitting the fan amongst those who initially benefited during the property booms from the late 70's onwards. Quite simply we need more council housing. Lots of it, built to the parker Morris specifications with a changes made to where necessary to not repeat the mistakes of the 60 and 70's. As for private rents they should be controlled and the government should introduce rent protection. I've long argued for a tax on anyone who owns a second home. The fact that around 3 quarters of old council housing stock is now in the grubby paws of rent to buy landlords making vast profits is nothing short of a national scandal. Don't hold your breath for any of the political parties to introduce any of those things any decade soon.
RIP ENGLISH FOOTBALL 24/6/14 |
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Stuk Top half 03 Dec 14 12.54pm | |
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Quote Anerley-Fried-Eagle at 03 Dec 2014 11.51am
This has been one of the biggest issues in this country for at least 2 generations now and the sh*t is only now hitting the fan amongst those who initially benefited during the property booms from the late 70's onwards. Quite simply we need more council housing. Lots of it, built to the parker Morris specifications with a changes made to where necessary to not repeat the mistakes of the 60 and 70's. As for private rents they should be controlled and the government should introduce rent protection. I've long argued for a tax on anyone who owns a second home. The fact that around 3 quarters of old council housing stock is now in the grubby paws of rent to buy landlords making vast profits is nothing short of a national scandal. Don't hold your breath for any of the political parties to introduce any of those things any decade soon.
Don't hold your breath, because it's actually not possible to do what you want.
Optimistic as ever |
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suicideatselhurst crawley 03 Dec 14 1.20pm | |
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Quote serial thriller at 23 Nov 2014 5.53pm
I reckon coming up to the General Election, housing is going to be a major topic of discussion. UKIP will frame it around over-population and thus immigration, Labour have claimed they will build a couple of hundred thousand houses by 2020, but actually I think the most interesting thing happening to combat the inflation of the cost of the property market is the grassroots stuff in London at the moment. I've referenced it a few times on here but have only recently realised how important a movement it is when you consider how much cynicism there is towards any form of collective activism. Be it the student protests or unions striking, there is a general belief that a) they don't achieve their aims and b) they are ideologically misguided. So these (admittedly small) victories for people coming together against property investors and landlords should act as an interesting rebuttal to that first claim... The E15 mums: [Link]
The gentrification of London is not new, but I think people are waking up to the damaging and divisive effect it has on the least powerful in our society. So my question to everyone is, do you agree with what these people are doing? And if you do, what distinguishes this from the student movement or the union protests? Serial why does this have to be different to any student or union demo....wether they are council mums, union activists or students...surely the point is in what they are demonstrating about, and as already qouted on here..a lot of demos go un-reported in the national or local media
Theres someone in my head ... But its not me X/Box game Tag bazcpfc1961, clan (HMS) |
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Stuk Top half 03 Dec 14 3.10pm | |
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Quote jcreedy at 25 Nov 2014 4.27pm
Quote DanH at 25 Nov 2014 4.21pm
My girlfriend and I have a joint income of circa £100k p.a. and currently rent in Brixton. We've pretty much given up on the idea on buying in London. Neither of us have rich parents and we can't save fast enough to get to the kind of deposit required. The London property market is f*cked for residential buyers because of foreign investors and the buy-to-let market. And when you do get your deposit together and feel immensely proud at how well you've done, you need to save another 3% of your house price for those c***s at the treasury.
0% on upto £125K still, but the higher bands do not pay on the first £125K either. i.e. A £500K house will cost £6,250 less in stamp duty than it did.
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johnfirewall 03 Dec 14 7.27pm | |
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I'd support the mansion tax if it applied to combined value across multiple properties.
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OknotOK Cockfosters, London 04 Dec 14 10.28am | |
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Quote Stuk at 03 Dec 2014 3.10pm
Quote jcreedy at 25 Nov 2014 4.27pm
Quote DanH at 25 Nov 2014 4.21pm
My girlfriend and I have a joint income of circa £100k p.a. and currently rent in Brixton. We've pretty much given up on the idea on buying in London. Neither of us have rich parents and we can't save fast enough to get to the kind of deposit required. The London property market is f*cked for residential buyers because of foreign investors and the buy-to-let market. And when you do get your deposit together and feel immensely proud at how well you've done, you need to save another 3% of your house price for those c***s at the treasury.
0% on upto £125K still, but the higher bands do not pay on the first £125K either. i.e. A £500K house will cost £6,250 less in stamp duty than it did. It is a decent change but the amount you have chosen is the most disingenuous way of promoting the policy? £500k - as the boundary for the slab rate increase - is the biggest change. The savings at £499,999 are about £20. No one can argue that stamp duty needed changing and the move to a standard graduated taxation is massively welcome. But mainly because it will prevent major distortions in the housing market rather than any huge tax saving. Total net revenue to the exchequer will be only £700m lower I think, but the high value properties that would result in paying more tax represented c. 1.7% of property transactions last year and even then many of those will have been bought through companies and therefore not covered by the current rules. Interesting that the key note items from Osborne's speech yesterday were centrist/populist. Moving away from the right - increasing taxes on the "wealthy" and further hits to the banks.
"It's almost like a moral decision. Except not really cos noone is going to find out," Jez, Peep Show |
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Stuk Top half 04 Dec 14 12.05pm | |
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Quote OknotOK at 04 Dec 2014 10.28am
Quote Stuk at 03 Dec 2014 3.10pm
Quote jcreedy at 25 Nov 2014 4.27pm
Quote DanH at 25 Nov 2014 4.21pm
My girlfriend and I have a joint income of circa £100k p.a. and currently rent in Brixton. We've pretty much given up on the idea on buying in London. Neither of us have rich parents and we can't save fast enough to get to the kind of deposit required. The London property market is f*cked for residential buyers because of foreign investors and the buy-to-let market. And when you do get your deposit together and feel immensely proud at how well you've done, you need to save another 3% of your house price for those c***s at the treasury.
0% on upto £125K still, but the higher bands do not pay on the first £125K either. i.e. A £500K house will cost £6,250 less in stamp duty than it did. It is a decent change but the amount you have chosen is the most disingenuous way of promoting the policy? £500k - as the boundary for the slab rate increase - is the biggest change. The savings at £499,999 are about £20. No one can argue that stamp duty needed changing and the move to a standard graduated taxation is massively welcome. But mainly because it will prevent major distortions in the housing market rather than any huge tax saving. Total net revenue to the exchequer will be only £700m lower I think, but the high value properties that would result in paying more tax represented c. 1.7% of property transactions last year and even then many of those will have been bought through companies and therefore not covered by the current rules. Interesting that the key note items from Osborne's speech yesterday were centrist/populist. Moving away from the right - increasing taxes on the "wealthy" and further hits to the banks.
Optimistic as ever |
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OknotOK Cockfosters, London 04 Dec 14 12.17pm | |
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Quote Stuk at 04 Dec 2014 12.05pm
You've not worked it out right, I hadn't either yesterday but I was close. Every purchase over £125K and under £937.5K will save on stamp duty. I'm not denying savings, I'm just saying they are much smaller just below the previous slab rates. So if you were buying a house for £499,999 then under the old system you would have paid £14,999.97. Under the new system you would pay £14,999.95. So a saving of 2p Just above the slab rate (i.e. a purchase of £500,001) and your saving is vastly more. You would pay £15,000.05 compared to £20,000.04 at the old rate. Savings are there but the amount you save is massively increased if you are paying just above the old rate boundaries. Hence why the example given (and the HMT examples provided) aren't a fair representation. They all just happen to be not much above one of those boundaries.
Admittedly I haven't seen the data though so don't know what % of transactions were just above those previous boundaries. Bloody hell I am about to start using charts again. I hope Johnny Eagles isn't reading this thread I'm quite lucky the Spectator has done this chart. As otherwise I would have had to attached my own one that I did yesterday I should say I absolutely support the change. I just think it needs to be explained fairly.
Attachment: Stamp Duty rates.png (100.43Kb)
"It's almost like a moral decision. Except not really cos noone is going to find out," Jez, Peep Show |
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Stuk Top half 04 Dec 14 12.33pm | |
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Quote OknotOK at 04 Dec 2014 12.17pm
Quote Stuk at 04 Dec 2014 12.05pm
You've not worked it out right, I hadn't either yesterday but I was close. Every purchase over £125K and under £937.5K will save on stamp duty. I'm not denying savings, I'm just saying they are much smaller just below the previous slab rates. So if you were buying a house for £499,999 then under the old system you would have paid £14,999.97. Under the new system you would pay £14,999.95. So a saving of 2p Just above the slab rate (i.e. a purchase of £500,001) and your saving is vastly more. You would pay £15,000.05 compared to £20,000.04 at the old rate. Savings are there but the amount you save is massively increased if you are paying just above the old rate boundaries. Hence why the example given (and the HMT examples provided) aren't a fair representation. They all just happen to be not much above one of those boundaries.
Admittedly I haven't seen the data though so don't know what % of transactions were just above those previous boundaries. Bloody hell I am about to start using charts again. I hope Johnny Eagles isn't reading this thread I'm quite lucky the Spectator has done this chart. As otherwise I would have had to attached my own one that I did yesterday I should say I absolutely support the change. I just think it needs to be explained fairly.
You're right actually, but that one price does seem the very worst case example. They've presumably done it to stop people keeping prices artificially just under the thresholds. I'm sure there must've been many deals where it was worth more (sold for more) but the "extra" above the threshold was paid in one form or another, off the record.
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Stuk Top half 04 Dec 14 12.35pm | |
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That chart is alot easier than going to and fro with the old and new calculators.
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OknotOK Cockfosters, London 04 Dec 14 12.37pm | |
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Quote Stuk at 04 Dec 2014 12.33pm
You're right actually, but that one price does seem the very worst case example. They've presumably done it to stop people keeping prices artificially just under the thresholds. I'm sure there must've been many deals where it was worth more (sold for more) but the "extra" above the threshold was paid in one form or another, off the record. That's why I think it is definitely a good tax change. Those distortions to the market were painful (and by the way the Revenue started cracking down heavily on transactions just below the thresholds where people paid extra for "chattels", "fixtures and fittings" etc. - because people were taking the mick with how much they were paying to avoid the slab rate increases). I completely support the change. I think it will lead to a more "natural" and "free" market for property.* But the examples the HMT gave were disingenuous in that they were designed to maximise the apparent reduction in tax. In fact there are even properties between £1m and £1.125m that will pay less tax under the new system. *Although there is an argument that this might accelerate house price growth, especially in areas of London, which would be a bad thing. Edited by OknotOK (04 Dec 2014 12.38pm)
"It's almost like a moral decision. Except not really cos noone is going to find out," Jez, Peep Show |
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