Originally Posted by
Big Shed
Andy, wouldn't that depend entirely on the type of people you mix with whilst overseas?
I don't think you can generalise like "French people are more interested in food than owning a house". I'm sure there are French people like that, just like there are Australians that are more interested in food (latte even!) than owning a house and what interest rates are like.
Let me give you an example, almost identical to yours, but opposite. Two friends of ours, younger and still in the workforce, one a nurse the other a teacher, went for a holiday to Ireland. Stayed in Dublin with a friend of hers. Couldn't get over the cost of housing in Dublin, so expensive and so small comapred to Oz. They came back and said all Irish people ever talk about is how much their house is worth now, who owns the latest Merc or BMW!
I'm sure it is the circles they moved in whilst there, and not all Irish people are like that.
If people don't buy their own house in Australia, and there is no law that says you have to, they pay a rent not that far removed from the cost of servicing a mortgage, so how does that allow them to "smell the roses"? In addition, they will pay that rent until the day they part this earth.
If on the other hand they buy a house, manage their money properly and pay the mortgage off within, say, 20 years, they then live rent free in their appreciating asset, not someone else's appreciating asset paying ever increasing rent.
We haven't paid rent or mortgage payments for over 20 years and have put that money to good use, allowing us to retire early and "smell the roses"!
Andy, your eply to Wheelin, and indeed my reply to you, doesn't address the concerns expressed by Wheelin.
I will reply to Wheelins' concerns in another post, have to get back to the shed and smell the roses, just finished lunch and not a latte in sight!:2tsup: