Comment on [deleted]
Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 months agoIt’s going from rental units to individually owned units. Meaning that people that are renting will be able to buy and build equity, and their mortgage will probably be cheaper than their rent.
Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world 7 months ago
If they can afford to/get approved for a loan to be able to afford it. They can’t. That’s why they rent rather than buy.
The system and vultures like this guy make it much cheaper to already be rich than to be poor and you’re acting like he’s doing people a favor by pricing them out of their homes.
Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 months ago
Why wouldn’t get they approved? There’s many programs out there to help first time home buyers. Often the biggest hurdle is lack of available inventory driving up the price. Who do you picture buying these condos once they’re on the market?
Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Because banks tend not to give loans to poor people. At least not ones without predatory terms and ruinously high interest.
Most of which are either super expensive, require battling a Kafkaesque amount of bureaucracy or are simply means tested to the point that 5 people total are eligible to even apply for them.
And even MORE often, there are more empty buildings outside of most people’s price range than there are people looking to buy a home.
Profiteering real estate conglomerates, mostly.
Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 months ago
I encourage you to step out of the Internet bubble of hopelessness and research what it takes to achieve homeownership. Almost anyone can get a mortgage with fair rates and zero money in their pocket. There’s much more oversight than you’d expect to ensure that poor people aren’t taken advantage of in the ways you described. There’s even great programs to reduce interest rates and eliminate down-payments for low-credit low-earners if they take a free class that teaches them about homeownership. You might benefit from that.
I think the biggest problem is a lack of education on the subject. People see that they don’t qualify for the types of loans their parents got and thus think that homeownership is impossible for them. Thus they throw money away on ever-increasing rent instead of locking into the same monthly payment with a mortgage.