• Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    You’re saying this but no you’re not.

    The riskier mortgages are guaranteed by the government, that means everyone pays if people stop paying their mortgage.

    Retirement for most owners without a pension fund depends on being able to sell their property, that’s also something the whole country would end up paying for through safety nets.

    If prices crash that means even more easy to snatch properties for the richest, so even less supply.

    The housing bubble bursting would lead to the same social crisis they had to go through in the USA, wishing for it to burst is wishing for people to die, more than are now because of the bubble.

    • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      We really have to be taxing the hell out of the rich like we did in the “make Canada great again” days, if we want a cushion for this crash.

      • psvrh@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        Yeah, this.

        A crash isn’t a bad thing if you can build a firewall against profiteering. Governments could buy property, instead of allowing the wealthy to, and governments could force the rich to take a haircut and/or tax the hell out them and then spend our way out of recession.

        It won’t happen, but it isn’t impossible or even improbable.

    • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Except in the US it brought prices back down to “normal” levels. Their were still expensive but they remained more affordable than here.

      • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        The housing situation in the USA and in Canada are different though. You would be shifting the cost from those able to snatch the good deals while the crash happens to the whole population having to pay back banks through increased taxes over decades.

        Don’t forget all the job losses that come with that, can’t buy a cheap house if you don’t even have a job!

        • bouh@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Government decides who pay taxes. Shitty governments decide everyone pays the same. Good government redistribute.

          In the early 20th century people responsible for crisis, bubbles and stuff were severly punished. It can be done.

          Also, you should get familiar with the story of the boiling frog. Wishing things won’t get worse will only get you dead eventually.

          • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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            11 months ago

            Our housing market as a whole is worth 6.1T

            You think you could tax the rich enough to compensate for the insurance on… $400B worth now insured by the CMHC…

            Good luck refunding this without impacting everyone in the long term and good luck not getting all those houses in the hands of those who already have a fortune to buy them!

            Remember 2008 in the USA? The people who ended up getting their hand on the cheap houses were those that already had a stack, including foreign investors, regular folks came out of that worse off because they lost their house and couldn’t afford to buy another one, in the end you just increase the number of people in the market for cheap housing! 👍

            • bouh@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              Insurance can collapse and their owners die in an alley. The mistake in 2008 was to save their asses. In early xxth century they would have. Now we pay them billions so they would have the courtesy to retire.

              Also congratulations on discovering about how fucked up a free market is for things people need to live. Housing should not be a market.

              • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                11 months ago

                Dude, that insurance is US! The government insures mortgages with less than 20% in downpayment because banks don’t want to loan money for mortgages because they don’t want to deal with repossession and having to sell them!

                • bouh@lemmy.world
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                  11 months ago

                  You don’t care about selling houses. Their purpose is to shelter people, not to be sold on a market.

                  The sooner the market crash to oblivion, the sooner people can actually live there. A government has the power to say no to bank and insurance shitters. You don’t actually have to pay them your right to live. The society doesn’t have to comply to every desire of these shitlords.

                  Yes, the economy would collapse. That would be for the best if you take care of the things that actually mater : house and food.

                  But I have no illusion about this kind of event happening in America. You guys are too hard into the free market and your capitalist overlords.

                  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                    11 months ago

                    Ok, let me repeat that.

                    CMHC is an insurance ran by the government. The government not respecting 400b in financial engagement would lead to the total collapse of our economy as businesses pull out of Canada. You and me are the ones who would be eating shit at that point, it wouldn’t impact people that are already rich.

                    What you’re wishing for is worse than the status quo and would kill more people than what’s currently happening and you probably would be one of the ones who would be affected the most otherwise you wouldn’t be complaining about the system in place at the moment.

            • bouh@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              You can’t buy a house if it’s not a free market. That’s the whole point.

              • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                11 months ago

                It is a free market though, it’s even advantageous to people who don’t have that much money because they can still get a mortgage without a huge downpayment. Back before CMHC mortgages were private loans, the previous owner would be the one financing the new owner at whatever rate they felt was appropriate and at whatever downpayment they felt was appropriate. Today you need 5% and if your credit score is good enough then the bank can’t say no.

                But you wouldn’t know that because you’re in Europe and you’re here talking about the Canadian housing market like you had any idea how it works.

                • bouh@lemmy.world
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                  11 months ago

                  So you’re telling me there are no problem of housing in Canada and no one is poor or dying because of it? But then why are we even talking if housing problems are unknown in your country?

                  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                    10 months ago

                    I’m not saying that, I’m saying they people saying they want to see the bubble bursts and everything crash in Canada just don’t understand what would happen if it did and it would make the issues with the housing bubble look like a freaking joke and would create a lot more poverty and kill a whole lot more of those who are complaining now and it would solve absolutely nothing for these people in the long run because they would just have more people competing against them for cheap housing while the rich would snatch all the properties getting repossessed. More demand, less offer, we’re back to the same bubble in a couple of years with the average citizen even poorer than before, just like in the USA after 2008.

      • Iusedtobeanadventurer@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        They remained more affordable, for a time. And then housing prices went right back through the roof.

        I bought a foreclosed house in 2012 for ~280k. It had been purchased by the previous owner for about 480k.

        I put about 150k into it, 100k the first year to make it a liveable property, and 50k or so over the next ten years.

        I sold it last year for about 850k…

        I then bought a new house that cost about 450k when it was built 4 years ago, for about 680k, in a less expensive market.

      • droopy4096@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        Sorry, but depending on location prices bounced back and surpassed pre-crisis levels within few years in US. Same issue that many already highlighted - folks lost their houses during crisis to the ones who can afford it but they still need place to live. Population grows and so are the real estate prices. Investment firms are busy buying up properties and oh boy will they go wild this time, now that this turned into a very targeted industry. So those prices going down only means some people will lose their homes, others their jobs and corporate investors will gain big time. Selected few with sufficient financial cushion will weather it out and the cycle will repeat itself… because nobody builds housing to keep up with the pace of population growth. With a caveat: some rural areas are still underappreciated and if housing is what you seek - go rural, mind you job selection might be limites if any… so gotta be financially independent… oh guess what? Another pass for the average folk. So yeah… new construction is the only way out of it. Bursting the bubble will hurt folks below median a lot more than status quo. (mind you escalation of institutional investors activity would be as tragic as bursting the bubble).

    • 601error@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      I’m ready for it to pop and the consequences thereof. I know I will have to shoulder some of the burden. Too bad that businesses love to privatize gains and nationalize risks, but that’s the mess we’re in.

      To copy another of my comments, I don’t buy this “but the economy” line. It smacks of “too big to fail”, and I think that occasional failure is necessary and healthy.

      • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        We’re not talking a dip in the stock market.

        We’re taking millions of jobs just disappearing, people’s savings gone, most banks going bankrupt…

        I know it’s hard to imagine, but the housing bubble can’t burst in a vacuum and in our country it’s taking everything with it and could mean decades to come back to some form of normalcy.

        Heck, you would probably not get to enjoy the potential drop in price because you would have had to move to another country to find a job, just like the Quebecois had to do at the beginning of last century.