this post was submitted on 14 Dec 2024
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[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago (2 children)

So your first comment pointed me in a different much wider direction. Reducing prices of houses now, and by any means, could be catastrophic. Too many peoples future wealth is tied up in their mortgages to banks, and banks themselves are highly reliant on expected return.

Building public housing is a more acute solution to your first comment. I don't know why Labor haven't begun a public housing commission. The only reason i can think is the industry hasn't had a 'true, start to finish' public housing commission for a long time.

Your talking thousands of new government employees, long term supply contracts, limited and possibly 'popularly' rejected house designs, not to mention the initial outlays to buy and prepare the land and all those costs.

A Public Housing Commission could be a long term project, but you couldn't start works tomorrow, it would take a bazooka to the budget (not saying Australia couldn'thandle it, but it'd be a hard sell), and you have to judge whether the wider population of voting Australia is ready to commit to such an ideologically different capital project structure.

Plus all the stuff and problems i've missed and not understood properly.

I'm not sure Australians, en masse, would be ready to go along with a project like that, and as individuals there would be a plethora of reasons for dissent a government would ne required to at least attempt to address.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

You are right that too much capital is tied up in Real Estate. This is a sign of an economy stagnating.

That capital should be invested in productive industries like manufacturing.