Cue @Purple rightly interjecting to ask about the cost side of the housing equation and the scope for radical innovations in building methods, materials, building regulations.
Because it's extremely expensive to set up and while the people building the houses may be greedy (as greedy as everyone else) they aren't that industrious or smart and there's no imperative to change.. Change is hard and painful, people don't change in a sudden and comprehensive way unless they have to.When there's is a tonne of money to be made.......in this case by innovating on the cost side of building houses......my simple question is if thats the case..........then why hasn't it happened yet? If its so obviously there.
Smart, greedy, industrious people aren't in the habit of leaving millions (billions?) of euro lying around on building sites.
30% of building materials that are delivered to building sites end up in landfill. Factory build homes generate low single digit waste of similar materials. That's just one area in which they save money. Labour is reduced and de-skilled and therefore is cheaper. Traffic to and from construction sites is reduced by 80%.More can be done on this side, I'm sure, but there are those for whom it seems that magically 30% of a new build house's costs are going to vanish into thin air by some adoption of some new building technique.......it resembles a desperate search for the Loch Ness monster........very hard to find, cause it just doesn't exist.
its a good analogy to be fair, i always watch the grand design episodes with factory built houses with great interest, it certainly looks a far more sensible option !Because it's extremely expensive to set up and while the people building the houses may be greedy (as greedy as everyone else) they aren't that industrious or smart and there's no imperative to change.. Change is hard and painful, people don't change in a sudden and comprehensive way unless they have to.
There are some changes taking place though. There is a considerable amount of modular and factor build capacity coming on stream.
30% of building materials that are delivered to building sites end up in landfill. Factory build homes generate low single digit waste of similar materials. That's just one area in which they save money. Labour is reduced and de-skilled and therefore is cheaper. Traffic to and from construction sites is reduced by 80%.
Imagine if you ordered a Toyota and a few weeks later a chassis was delivered to your house. Then the rest of the bits were delivered, bit by bit. The assembly of your car would take place in your driveway with continuous delays because bits weren't there etc. Quality Control would be some guy rocking up every few days and having a nosy for a few minutes. Just imagine how expensive that would be and how bad the quality would be. That's how we build homes.
If it isn't profitable then where are the estates that have houses sitting unsold? As far as I can see it's a sellers market (or was until very recently). All houses are being bought.Completely the right thing to do......all supply demand pricing pressure was being channeled into rents....as there was no "Rent-to-Income" caps put in place......bonkers strategy........supply-demand pricing pressure should be channeled into where its needed which is the underlying house prices....such that housing construction output responded to excess prices.
We've most desperately needed more housing in Ireland for years.......yet construction capacity as been dedicated to commerical real estate.....why? Cause its the highest and best use of capital/labor as signalled by pricing.
Its about time that the highest best use of construction capital and labor was dedicated to HOUSE (not apt) building.
People seem confused around whats going on in Ireland.....whats been happening is that developers under current building standards have struggled to deliver housing at an acceptable margin (~20%) such that their time/efforts/risk was adequately compensated. I'm sure some lunatics will come in here now and argue that they are making loads of money already......really.....then why arent they building 30k, 40k, 50k houses a year then if its so bloody profitable? They arent, cause it isnt.
I think we might finally have the right mix in place - HTB, First Homes Shared Equity & 4x LTI rules......that will ensure a 15-20% margin on 3-Bed semi in Great Dublin Area.....moves into something approaching a certainty for a developer.....such that they can look out 3-5 years and start making investments now to scale up production.
I applaud this move.
what's in it for the central bank? Why are they acting?
Almost certainly 1 January 2023. The exemptions are granted on a calendar year basis. But do wait for the announcement first.Anyone know when the changes will take effect?
Thanks
This is the "magic wand" solution that everyone on the political spectrum from right to left likes to wave around.The solution is to bring down the cost of building new houses.
Why do you think that?it's naive to think that the demand side wasn't suppressed below levels that were prudent.
The bank has also decided to broaden its definition of a first-time buyer to include borrowers who are separated or divorced or have undergone insolvency or bankruptcy and no longer have an interest in their previous property.
And a first-time buyer who is getting a top-up loan or re-mortgage with an increase in the principal may be considered “first time”, provided the property remains their primary home.
The problem we have is
1) House prices are too high for people on good salaries
yet, at the same time,
2) House prices are not high enough to make it profitable to build loads of houses.
The solution is to bring down the cost of building new houses.
Giving people unsustainable mortgages will just push up the prices of houses further and leave them no better off.
There was some merit in the argument that LTI levels were set at a time of high interest rates and that they should be brought down when interest rates fell. But now that interest rates are rising again, it seems wrong allow people borrow 4 times their joint incomes.
Brendan
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?