Nett migration and house price inflation forced into one frankenstein of a graph - courtesy of my OCD
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Nett migration and house price inflation forced into one frankenstein of a graph
Collapse
X
-
Nett migration and house price inflation forced into one frankenstein of a graph
Hamish Patel | ph: 09 625 4693 | mob: 021 625 693
My Website
Be informed - register for our free monthly newsletter
-
Hamish Patel | ph: 09 625 4693 | mob: 021 625 693
My Website
Be informed - register for our free monthly newsletter
Comment
-
Given many people buy properties when they think they will go up in value, trying increase supply while curbing demand might prove difficult. Banks are pulling back on lending now with demand still very high.
You'd need some government program to de-risk the process for the buyers and banks.
But that would paper over our very high cost of new property in Auckland? Recent interest.co article said RMA and other red tape is up to half the cost for a subdivision and new build project per house.
I don't know.
Originally posted by Davo36 View PostI've always thought the 2 go hand in hand. There have been many of these graphs over the years.
But we're told it's purely a supply problem. We need to both curb immigration and ramp up supply.Free online Property Investment Course from iFindProperty, a residential investment property agency.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Davo36 View PostBut we're told it's purely a supply problem. We need to both curb immigration and ramp up supply.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Chris W View PostPerhaps we should be trying to understand and explain the current anomaly - high immigration and areas with flat or falling property prices (some Auckland suburbs). This is in spite of the common view point of fundamental shortage of supply ...
Comment
-
Originally posted by Chris W View PostPerhaps we should be trying to understand and explain the current anomaly - high immigration and areas with flat or falling property prices (some Auckland suburbs). This is in spite of the common view point of fundamental shortage of supply ...
Comment
Comment