Pukka's Chicken Balti pies are OKLoveCurryPies wrote:My username was in memory of those terrible curry pies they used to sell at Turf Moor.
However, I think there is a huge market for a real curry in a pie.

Pukka's Chicken Balti pies are OKLoveCurryPies wrote:My username was in memory of those terrible curry pies they used to sell at Turf Moor.
However, I think there is a huge market for a real curry in a pie.
Not strictly true. In Harrogate, for example, new housing developments are subject to 40% affordable housing provision.Blackrod wrote:Just had a read through some of this. Clearly there's not enough affordable housing in areas where people want to live. There is affordable housing in some areas. In Nelson and other areas families have moved in to deteriorate the area to drive down house prices so their extended family can buy them cheaper. If you want to live in more affluent area then you have to pay the going rate.
In years gone by people scrimped and saved more and did without many things just to keep a roof over their heads. Now many young people who could get on the housing ladder spend money on the latest technology. expensive nights out boozing, expensive finance on brand new cars that they could otherwise not afford. People could make more sacrifices in where they choose to live and what they spend their money on. They want everything they want immediately generation driven by social media and reality tv.
Blackrod wrote:Just had a read through some of this. Clearly there's not enough affordable housing in areas where people want to live. There is affordable housing in some areas. In Nelson and other areas families have moved in to deteriorate the area to drive down house prices so their extended family can buy them cheaper. If you want to live in more affluent area then you have to pay the going rate.
In years gone by people scrimped and saved more and did without many things just to keep a roof over their heads. Now many young people who could get on the housing ladder spend money on the latest technology. expensive nights out boozing, expensive finance on brand new cars that they could otherwise not afford. People could make more sacrifices in where they choose to live and what they spend their money on. They want everything they want immediately generation driven by social media and reality tv.
Presumably if wages are a lot lower than they were in the seventies, it will also be very rare to see young people running a car, going on a foreign holiday, or getting drunk?South West Claret. wrote:Well of course more young people can’t afford to buy homes as their wages and conditions are a lot lower in general then say in the 70’s.
Quite simply if you have lived through those periods you will have witnessed it in person and well aware, although an awful lot of those people didn’t realise the so called drip drip slowly slowly way it came in by successive Governments.
These Governments did it by making it virtually impossible for an awful lot of people to improve wages & conditions by banning Trade Unions from actually helping their members (and non- union members if they only new it)! to improve their lot.
Thatcher’s Government was responsible for this dumming down of rates for the majority of workers, sadly the Tory Blair Government did little to bring back that regulater of the economy for employees .
That is the historical evidence if you actually want the truth and not another spurious and frankly excuse from the obvious quarters.
No sorry dsr it doesn’t work like that if Young people find themselves not able to fund a large project like buying a house then they find a cheaper way of living (at home for accommodation) for instance and then spend money that they do have spare on other things instead, think they call it “a lifestyle choice” these days.dsr wrote:Presumably if wages are a lot lower than they were in the seventies, it will also be very rare to see young people running a car, going on a foreign holiday, or getting drunk?
In 1992 the average house price was 3 times the average salary. Now it is over 5 times. Add in the fact that banks used to offer 100% mortgages and it really isn’t simple.boatshed bill wrote:Hasn't this always been the case?
You either share with mates and save, don't p!ss half your wages against the wall, or fall short. It's that simple.
It's a lot less simple than you have made it, certainly. You have ignored interest rates and income tax.Rileybobs wrote:In 1992 the average house price was 3 times the average salary. Now it is over 5 times. Add in the fact that banks used to offer 100% mortgages and it really isn’t simple.
Getting rid of sky and a mobile phone isn’t going to go very far in helping a young person to save £15,000+.Burnleyareback2 wrote:Young people seem happy with paying for £50 mobile phones a month, sky TV etc etc.
It’s all just a myth, save up like we all had to
A couple of grand a year goes quite along way in helping a young person save £15,000. If they are expecting to do it in 5 years, for example, it'll bring it down to 3 years.Rileybobs wrote:Getting rid of sky and a mobile phone isn’t going to go very far in helping a young person to save £15,000+.
Yes it will. WrongRileybobs wrote:Getting rid of sky and a mobile phone isn’t going to go very far in helping a young person to save £15,000+.
That's a different argument. Arguing that young people nowadays can't afford houses while 25 years ago people could afford houses, that's one thing. Arguing that young people can't afford houses because they have spent all their money on very expensive phones and satellite TV? (Not to mention cars and foreign holidays. Which you didn't mention.)Rileybobs wrote:OK, I concede that it would obviously help but that isn’t the issue. Smart phones and subscription-based TV are part of everyday life. Obviously people could get rid of their phone, watch only terrestrial television and war beans on toast every night but should that really be necessary. Getting onto the property ladder is becoming harder and pretending it’s because young people are lazy and wasteful is ignoring the problem.
No, my argument is that a house now costs 5 times a persons salary rather than 3. So a person would need to save for nearly twice the duration.dsr wrote:That's a different argument. Arguing that young people nowadays can't afford houses while 25 years ago people could afford houses, that's one thing. Arguing that young people can't afford houses because they have spent all their money on very expensive phones and satellite TV? (Not to mention cars and foreign holidays. Which you didn't mention.)
Your argument is that young people nowadays can't afford houses because they choose to spend their money on other things. So is mine. So we agree.
How exactly would you propose that we do that?SmudgetheClaret wrote:Maybe if we stopped increasing the population by 350000 a year that might stop people fighting over houses..
Build a wall of course ...Rileybobs wrote:How exactly would you propose that we do that?
Rileybobs wrote:OK, I concede that it would obviously help but that isn’t the issue. Smart phones and subscription-based TV are part of everyday life. Obviously people could get rid of their phone, watch only terrestrial television and war beans on toast every night but should that really be necessary. Getting onto the property ladder is becoming harder and pretending it’s because young people are lazy and wasteful is ignoring the problem.
As for the point above about interest rates, the issue isn’t the affordability of the repayments, it’s about saving the money for a deposit.