Does the real estate market increasingly force more families to build?

  • Erstellt am 2019-04-06 11:35:44

pffreestyler

2019-04-18 08:02:38
  • #1
You are a bot ... or a troll who has discovered copy and paste ...
 

hampshire

2019-04-18 08:20:00
  • #2
In the “warning corner,” case studies are calculated with unchanged assessment rates. These are supposed to be adjusted as part of the reform. To what extent this will happen is uncertain, as the assessment rates are set municipally and may not necessarily be achieved by the reform. Conclusion: there are currently no realistic case studies and Scholz’s ministry is entering another review round.
 

Tassimat

2019-04-18 08:40:55
  • #3
Rightly, Scholz is going into the next round of scrutiny. The whole thing is a huge prestige project with a lot of political explosive power because it indeed directly affects the money of many people.

But as long as cities, municipalities, or whoever can change the local and actual tax rate using leverage factors, they are ultimately the "guilty party" for price increases. The reform only indirectly, Scholz doesn't get any direct money from it anyway.
 

Buchweizen

2019-04-18 09:25:41
  • #4


Exactly.

I was also going to say, have you guys ever taken a close look at the "average houses" in Portugal, Spain, Italy, and on the various islands like Corsica, Malta, etc., not to mention Eastern Europe? I'm not talking about the luxury properties in prime locations there, but for example the houses in the hinterland that the average person owns. None of you would want to live in those (neither would I).
 

Nordlys

2019-04-18 09:53:26
  • #5
Do you know the average suburban house in Germany in the countryside? Where the bricklayer lives or the roofer? Four people, max 100sqm, one bathroom, steep stairs up, small rooms, an extension that used to be a stable and now houses the tools and garden stuff....but it is personal and better, 100 times better than a moldy rental apartment at BUWOG or something. K.
 

Yosan

2019-04-18 10:14:43
  • #6
So I know the houses in Corsica quite well... often relatively dilapidated, often also small, but climatically speaking it doesn't have to be the same as in a German low mountain range. Unfortunately, I have not yet been near the only Corsican ski area... it would be interesting to see if the houses there look a bit more weather-resistant. But honestly, I would personally be willing to give up some luxury in order to live in Corsica.
 
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