• Nice to get the figures

    From Gordon@21:1/5 to All on Thu Apr 11 21:47:36 2024
    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse
    outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social
    housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of
    families living in emergency housing motels,โ€ Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich80105@21:1/5 to Gordon on Fri Apr 12 11:51:03 2024
    On 11 Apr 2024 21:47:36 GMT, Gordon <Gordon@leaf.net.nz> wrote:

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >families living in emergency housing motels,” Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack >mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >when they worked. A win win situation.
    Other reports: https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/488842/bishop-says-national-s-landlord-tax-breaks-and-no-cause-terminations-pro-tenant
    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/514005/changes-to-tenancy-laws-to-come-into-force-next-year


    With the percentage of our population needing to find rental
    accommodation, and the government wanting to increase immigration,
    there is sufficient desperation to find somewhere to live to have
    resulted in significant increases in rentals, through both National
    and Labour Governments. "Helping tenants" by making it easier to evict
    even exemplary tenants does not seem particularly helpful - it is
    likely to see a move towards owning rental property becoming even more
    favoured over investing in profitable companies - a country gouging
    profits from the poor to enrich the already wealthy, who may be the
    only people able to afford to buy a property. Is this policy intended
    to shift the market so they can get more money from sales of Housing
    Corp rentals?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Tony@21:1/5 to Gordon on Thu Apr 11 23:24:45 2024
    Gordon <Gordon@leaf.net.nz> wrote: >https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >families living in emergency housing motels,โ€ Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack >mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >when they worked. A win win situation.
    If it wasn't so sad it would be funny how the last government saw landlords as the enemy of tenants when the opoosite is probably true. Helping landlords helps tenants - funny that eh?
    I am not a landlord,

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Tony@21:1/5 to Rich80105@hotmail.com on Fri Apr 12 00:44:03 2024
    Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com> wrote:
    On 11 Apr 2024 21:47:36 GMT, Gordon <Gordon@leaf.net.nz> wrote:

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >>this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >>outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >>housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >>families living in emergency housing motels,” Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack >>mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >>when they worked. A win win situation.
    Other reports: >https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/488842/bishop-says-national-s-landlord-tax-breaks-and-no-cause-terminations-pro-tenant
    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/514005/changes-to-tenancy-laws-to-come-into-force-next-year


    With the percentage of our population needing to find rental
    accommodation, and the government wanting to increase immigration,
    there is sufficient desperation to find somewhere to live to have
    resulted in significant increases in rentals, through both National
    and Labour Governments. "Helping tenants" by making it easier to evict
    even exemplary tenants does not seem particularly helpful - it is
    likely to see a move towards owning rental property becoming even more >favoured over investing in profitable companies - a country gouging
    profits from the poor to enrich the already wealthy, who may be the
    only people able to afford to buy a property. Is this policy intended
    to shift the market so they can get more money from sales of Housing
    Corp rentals?
    Sheer nonsense.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David Goodwin@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 12 12:16:37 2024
    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any
    significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and
    demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because
    costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the
    market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the
    table.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the
    total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or
    leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords
    (total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to
    someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase
    supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer
    people needing/wanting to rent).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich80105@21:1/5 to david+usenet@zx.net.nz on Fri Apr 12 14:03:10 2024
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse
    outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social
    housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of
    families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack >> mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any
    significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and
    demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the
    table.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the
    total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords
    (total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to
    someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase
    supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer
    people needing/wanting to rent).

    During recent years important effects on the market have been:
    * An increase in demand for houses - growth in population through
    families and also significant increases in immigration.
    * The sell-off of State Houses under National-led Governments leading
    to an acute shortage of social housing, or where they were sold to
    local trusts, the reality that those entities did not have enough
    income to expand in those areas, and in some cases were unable to even
    maintain the buildings adequately. (There was for example a shortage
    of social housing in the Wairarapa - it is only more recently that
    government has started building more.
    * Nimby-ism in local areas in resistance to intensification, making
    new developments more expensive,
    * More recently, Auckland deciding to allow intensification, leading
    to a lot of single dwelling sections now having 4 to 6 multi-story
    units . That increased the value of land in some parts of Auckland.
    Wellington has very recently made a similar decision; we have yet to
    see what effect that may have. In both cases, it has or will make the
    problems of services such as supply of water and in some cases power
    more acute.
    * Recent Labour governments undertook a major programme of building
    more social housing, and bringing existing homes up to modern
    standards. Not all rental properties meet those standards.
    * Inflation has meant that capital gains have become a more
    significant component of investment returns. Landlords used to
    describe themselves as 'farming capital gains'. The exemption from tax
    on capital gains has applied to owner-occupiers for a long time, but
    it has become more complicated with some owning houses in more than
    one location, buying housing for children (eg while at University),
    then getting some income from it both during that time and between
    family occupancy. This contrasts to most commercial operations for
    which capital gains are taxed on realisation (for both shares and real property). Thus for example most New Zealanders will pay tax on
    realised gains generated from share sales in the Kiwisaver portfolio
    they have selected (most Kiwisaver providers do not invest directly in
    property for liquidity reasons, but if they did they would be allowing
    for eventual capital gains tax in the value passed on to investors).
    * Not allowing a tax deduction for interest is a rough way of
    increasing taxable income in lieu of the complications of taxing
    capital gains while exempting that tax for owner-occupied dwellings.
    It discriminates in favour of those that do not need to borrow to
    maintain a property, and the match is not good on an annual basis, but
    is a crude attempt at equity - in effect it is better than nothing,
    and taxing capital gains has different anomalies.
    * It is pleasing to hear that Christopher Luxon will look at tax
    anomalies for charities, but not listen to reason for landlords -
    perhaps self-interest has a part to play . . .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Crash@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 12 15:33:28 2024
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 14:03:10 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants >>>
    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >>> this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse
    outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social
    housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of
    families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack >>> mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >>> when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the
    table.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the
    total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords
    (total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to
    someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>people needing/wanting to rent).

    During recent years important effects on the market have been:
    * An increase in demand for houses - growth in population through
    families and also significant increases in immigration.

    Balanced by increased levels of emigration. Interesting that you
    forgot to mention this.

    * The sell-off of State Houses under National-led Governments leading
    to an acute shortage of social housing, or where they were sold to
    local trusts, the reality that those entities did not have enough
    income to expand in those areas, and in some cases were unable to even >maintain the buildings adequately. (There was for example a shortage
    of social housing in the Wairarapa - it is only more recently that
    government has started building more.

    That was more than 6 years ago. Labour, prior to the 2017 election,
    pledged to build 100,000 state houses over 10 years, but had no idea
    how they could achieve this. Some were built but in quantities well
    short of those pledged.

    * Nimby-ism in local areas in resistance to intensification, making
    new developments more expensive,
    * More recently, Auckland deciding to allow intensification, leading
    to a lot of single dwelling sections now having 4 to 6 multi-story
    units . That increased the value of land in some parts of Auckland. >Wellington has very recently made a similar decision; we have yet to
    see what effect that may have. In both cases, it has or will make the >problems of services such as supply of water and in some cases power
    more acute.
    * Recent Labour governments undertook a major programme of building
    more social housing, and bringing existing homes up to modern
    standards. Not all rental properties meet those standards.

    That major program did not deliver anything like the quantities
    promised. I am surprised you reference what was an abject and
    embarrassing failure.

    * Inflation has meant that capital gains have become a more
    significant component of investment returns. Landlords used to
    describe themselves as 'farming capital gains'. The exemption from tax
    on capital gains has applied to owner-occupiers for a long time, but
    it has become more complicated with some owning houses in more than
    one location, buying housing for children (eg while at University),
    then getting some income from it both during that time and between
    family occupancy. This contrasts to most commercial operations for
    which capital gains are taxed on realisation (for both shares and real >property). Thus for example most New Zealanders will pay tax on
    realised gains generated from share sales in the Kiwisaver portfolio
    they have selected (most Kiwisaver providers do not invest directly in >property for liquidity reasons, but if they did they would be allowing
    for eventual capital gains tax in the value passed on to investors).
    * Not allowing a tax deduction for interest is a rough way of
    increasing taxable income in lieu of the complications of taxing
    capital gains while exempting that tax for owner-occupied dwellings.
    It discriminates in favour of those that do not need to borrow to
    maintain a property, and the match is not good on an annual basis, but
    is a crude attempt at equity - in effect it is better than nothing,
    and taxing capital gains has different anomalies.
    * It is pleasing to hear that Christopher Luxon will look at tax
    anomalies for charities, but not listen to reason for landlords -
    perhaps self-interest has a part to play . . .

    It is also pleasing to observe a Government that does what it says it
    will do. I seriously question some of those commitments but I have no
    doubt whatsoever that they will never pull out an unannounced stunt
    that was Labour's "3 waters" reforms.



    --
    Crash McBash

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich80105@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 12 16:46:44 2024
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 15:33:28 +1200, Crash <nogood@dontbother.invalid>
    wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 14:03:10 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants >>>>
    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >>>> this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >>>> outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >>>> housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >>>> families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack >>>> mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >>>> when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the >>>table.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords >>>(total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to >>>someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    During recent years important effects on the market have been:
    * An increase in demand for houses - growth in population through
    families and also significant increases in immigration.

    Balanced by increased levels of emigration. Interesting that you
    forgot to mention this.
    The net effect was a significant increase in our population, and
    emigration and immigration may have affected different parts of the
    property markets, as would have movements to and away from particular locations.

    * The sell-off of State Houses under National-led Governments leading
    to an acute shortage of social housing, or where they were sold to
    local trusts, the reality that those entities did not have enough
    income to expand in those areas, and in some cases were unable to even >>maintain the buildings adequately. (There was for example a shortage
    of social housing in the Wairarapa - it is only more recently that >>government has started building more.

    That was more than 6 years ago. Labour, prior to the 2017 election,
    pledged to build 100,000 state houses over 10 years, but had no idea
    how they could achieve this. Some were built but in quantities well
    short of those pledged.
    There explanation of targets left a bit to be desired - but they still
    did see a very significant rise in dwellings built over those years.
    Does the current government have any aims to increase housing numbers?

    * Nimby-ism in local areas in resistance to intensification, making
    new developments more expensive,
    * More recently, Auckland deciding to allow intensification, leading
    to a lot of single dwelling sections now having 4 to 6 multi-story
    units . That increased the value of land in some parts of Auckland. >>Wellington has very recently made a similar decision; we have yet to
    see what effect that may have. In both cases, it has or will make the >>problems of services such as supply of water and in some cases power
    more acute.
    * Recent Labour governments undertook a major programme of building
    more social housing, and bringing existing homes up to modern
    standards. Not all rental properties meet those standards.

    That major program did not deliver anything like the quantities
    promised. I am surprised you reference what was an abject and
    embarrassing failure.
    It was still successful, with a huge number also brought up to healthy
    home standards. The quantities you refer to were achieved but not
    necessarily solely by government.


    * Inflation has meant that capital gains have become a more
    significant component of investment returns. Landlords used to
    describe themselves as 'farming capital gains'. The exemption from tax
    on capital gains has applied to owner-occupiers for a long time, but
    it has become more complicated with some owning houses in more than
    one location, buying housing for children (eg while at University),
    then getting some income from it both during that time and between
    family occupancy. This contrasts to most commercial operations for
    which capital gains are taxed on realisation (for both shares and real >>property). Thus for example most New Zealanders will pay tax on
    realised gains generated from share sales in the Kiwisaver portfolio
    they have selected (most Kiwisaver providers do not invest directly in >>property for liquidity reasons, but if they did they would be allowing
    for eventual capital gains tax in the value passed on to investors).
    * Not allowing a tax deduction for interest is a rough way of
    increasing taxable income in lieu of the complications of taxing
    capital gains while exempting that tax for owner-occupied dwellings.
    It discriminates in favour of those that do not need to borrow to
    maintain a property, and the match is not good on an annual basis, but
    is a crude attempt at equity - in effect it is better than nothing,
    and taxing capital gains has different anomalies.
    * It is pleasing to hear that Christopher Luxon will look at tax
    anomalies for charities, but not listen to reason for landlords -
    perhaps self-interest has a part to play . . .

    It is also pleasing to observe a Government that does what it says it
    will do. I seriously question some of those commitments but I have no
    doubt whatsoever that they will never pull out an unannounced stunt
    that was Labour's "3 waters" reforms.

    Some charities have a very high level of money donated that goes to
    expenses of the charity itself; it does need looking at, but you are
    plain wrong to call Three Waters an unannounced stunt - Announcements
    were made over a long period, but the legislation to enable it to
    happen was not put through parliament prior to the election; what
    National are now proposing is very similar - they may still force some
    Councils to work with neighboring Councils even if they do not want
    to, they have adopted structures to suit lenders that are similar to
    those proposed by Labour, but will leave more of the risk and
    operations to local councils who lack the staff and expertise - the
    effect has been that most local bodies are planning rate significant
    rate increases next year 15% - it will increase inflation, but ACT is
    happy, it lowers income tax and moves to a flatter tax system that
    looks after the wealthy and hits the poor with higher taxes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Tony@21:1/5 to Rich80105@hotmail.com on Fri Apr 12 19:58:28 2024
    Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com> wrote:
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 15:33:28 +1200, Crash <nogood@dontbother.invalid>
    wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 14:03:10 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com> >>wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin >>><david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz >>>>says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants >>>>>
    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >>>>> this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >>>>> outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >>>>> housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >>>>> families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >>>>> when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>>>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>>>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>>>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the >>>>table.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >>>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords >>>>(total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to >>>>someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    During recent years important effects on the market have been:
    * An increase in demand for houses - growth in population through >>>families and also significant increases in immigration.

    Balanced by increased levels of emigration. Interesting that you
    forgot to mention this.
    The net effect was a significant increase in our population, and
    emigration and immigration may have affected different parts of the
    property markets, as would have movements to and away from particular >locations.

    * The sell-off of State Houses under National-led Governments leading
    to an acute shortage of social housing, or where they were sold to
    local trusts, the reality that those entities did not have enough
    income to expand in those areas, and in some cases were unable to even >>>maintain the buildings adequately. (There was for example a shortage
    of social housing in the Wairarapa - it is only more recently that >>>government has started building more.

    That was more than 6 years ago. Labour, prior to the 2017 election, >>pledged to build 100,000 state houses over 10 years, but had no idea
    how they could achieve this. Some were built but in quantities well
    short of those pledged.
    There explanation of targets left a bit to be desired - but they still
    did see a very significant rise in dwellings built over those years.
    Does the current government have any aims to increase housing numbers?

    * Nimby-ism in local areas in resistance to intensification, making
    new developments more expensive,
    * More recently, Auckland deciding to allow intensification, leading
    to a lot of single dwelling sections now having 4 to 6 multi-story
    units . That increased the value of land in some parts of Auckland. >>>Wellington has very recently made a similar decision; we have yet to
    see what effect that may have. In both cases, it has or will make the >>>problems of services such as supply of water and in some cases power
    more acute.
    * Recent Labour governments undertook a major programme of building
    more social housing, and bringing existing homes up to modern
    standards. Not all rental properties meet those standards.

    That major program did not deliver anything like the quantities
    promised. I am surprised you reference what was an abject and
    embarrassing failure.
    It was still successful, with a huge number also brought up to healthy
    home standards. The quantities you refer to were achieved but not
    necessarily solely by government.


    * Inflation has meant that capital gains have become a more
    significant component of investment returns. Landlords used to
    describe themselves as 'farming capital gains'. The exemption from tax
    on capital gains has applied to owner-occupiers for a long time, but
    it has become more complicated with some owning houses in more than
    one location, buying housing for children (eg while at University),
    then getting some income from it both during that time and between
    family occupancy. This contrasts to most commercial operations for
    which capital gains are taxed on realisation (for both shares and real >>>property). Thus for example most New Zealanders will pay tax on
    realised gains generated from share sales in the Kiwisaver portfolio
    they have selected (most Kiwisaver providers do not invest directly in >>>property for liquidity reasons, but if they did they would be allowing >>>for eventual capital gains tax in the value passed on to investors).
    * Not allowing a tax deduction for interest is a rough way of
    increasing taxable income in lieu of the complications of taxing
    capital gains while exempting that tax for owner-occupied dwellings.
    It discriminates in favour of those that do not need to borrow to >>>maintain a property, and the match is not good on an annual basis, but
    is a crude attempt at equity - in effect it is better than nothing,
    and taxing capital gains has different anomalies.
    * It is pleasing to hear that Christopher Luxon will look at tax >>>anomalies for charities, but not listen to reason for landlords -
    perhaps self-interest has a part to play . . .

    It is also pleasing to observe a Government that does what it says it
    will do. I seriously question some of those commitments but I have no >>doubt whatsoever that they will never pull out an unannounced stunt
    that was Labour's "3 waters" reforms.

    Some charities have a very high level of money donated that goes to
    expenses of the charity itself; it does need looking at, but you are
    plain wrong to call Three Waters an unannounced stunt - Announcements
    were made over a long period
    Not one single announcement or hint was given prior to that election - not one> You are lying.
    , but the legislation to enable it to
    happen was not put through parliament prior to the election; what
    National are now proposing is very similar
    Not even close - they are not proposing separatist, so-called co-governance undemocratic, apartheid processes. And that, nothing else, is the difference that matters.
    - they may still force some
    Councils to work with neighboring Councils even if they do not want
    to, they have adopted structures to suit lenders that are similar to
    those proposed by Labour, but will leave more of the risk and
    operations to local councils who lack the staff and expertise - the
    effect has been that most local bodies are planning rate significant
    rate increases next year 15% - it will increase inflation, but ACT is
    happy, it lowers income tax and moves to a flatter tax system that
    looks after the wealthy and hits the poor with higher taxes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich80105@21:1/5 to lizandtony@orcon.net.nz on Sat Apr 13 16:51:52 2024
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 19:58:28 -0000 (UTC), Tony
    <lizandtony@orcon.net.nz> wrote:

    Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com> wrote:
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 15:33:28 +1200, Crash <nogood@dontbother.invalid> >>wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 14:03:10 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com> >>>wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin >>>><david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz >>>>>says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants >>>>>>
    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >>>>>> outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >>>>>> housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >>>>>> families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>>>>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>>>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>>>>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>>>>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the >>>>>table.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >>>>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>>>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords >>>>>(total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to >>>>>someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent) >>>>>
    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>>>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>>>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    During recent years important effects on the market have been:
    * An increase in demand for houses - growth in population through >>>>families and also significant increases in immigration.

    Balanced by increased levels of emigration. Interesting that you
    forgot to mention this.
    The net effect was a significant increase in our population, and
    emigration and immigration may have affected different parts of the >>property markets, as would have movements to and away from particular >>locations.

    * The sell-off of State Houses under National-led Governments leading >>>>to an acute shortage of social housing, or where they were sold to >>>>local trusts, the reality that those entities did not have enough >>>>income to expand in those areas, and in some cases were unable to even >>>>maintain the buildings adequately. (There was for example a shortage
    of social housing in the Wairarapa - it is only more recently that >>>>government has started building more.

    That was more than 6 years ago. Labour, prior to the 2017 election, >>>pledged to build 100,000 state houses over 10 years, but had no idea
    how they could achieve this. Some were built but in quantities well >>>short of those pledged.
    There explanation of targets left a bit to be desired - but they still
    did see a very significant rise in dwellings built over those years.
    Does the current government have any aims to increase housing numbers?

    * Nimby-ism in local areas in resistance to intensification, making
    new developments more expensive,
    * More recently, Auckland deciding to allow intensification, leading
    to a lot of single dwelling sections now having 4 to 6 multi-story >>>>units . That increased the value of land in some parts of Auckland. >>>>Wellington has very recently made a similar decision; we have yet to >>>>see what effect that may have. In both cases, it has or will make the >>>>problems of services such as supply of water and in some cases power >>>>more acute.
    * Recent Labour governments undertook a major programme of building >>>>more social housing, and bringing existing homes up to modern >>>>standards. Not all rental properties meet those standards.

    That major program did not deliver anything like the quantities
    promised. I am surprised you reference what was an abject and >>>embarrassing failure.
    It was still successful, with a huge number also brought up to healthy
    home standards. The quantities you refer to were achieved but not >>necessarily solely by government.


    * Inflation has meant that capital gains have become a more
    significant component of investment returns. Landlords used to
    describe themselves as 'farming capital gains'. The exemption from tax >>>>on capital gains has applied to owner-occupiers for a long time, but
    it has become more complicated with some owning houses in more than
    one location, buying housing for children (eg while at University), >>>>then getting some income from it both during that time and between >>>>family occupancy. This contrasts to most commercial operations for >>>>which capital gains are taxed on realisation (for both shares and real >>>>property). Thus for example most New Zealanders will pay tax on >>>>realised gains generated from share sales in the Kiwisaver portfolio >>>>they have selected (most Kiwisaver providers do not invest directly in >>>>property for liquidity reasons, but if they did they would be allowing >>>>for eventual capital gains tax in the value passed on to investors).
    * Not allowing a tax deduction for interest is a rough way of >>>>increasing taxable income in lieu of the complications of taxing >>>>capital gains while exempting that tax for owner-occupied dwellings.
    It discriminates in favour of those that do not need to borrow to >>>>maintain a property, and the match is not good on an annual basis, but >>>>is a crude attempt at equity - in effect it is better than nothing,
    and taxing capital gains has different anomalies.
    * It is pleasing to hear that Christopher Luxon will look at tax >>>>anomalies for charities, but not listen to reason for landlords - >>>>perhaps self-interest has a part to play . . .

    It is also pleasing to observe a Government that does what it says it >>>will do. I seriously question some of those commitments but I have no >>>doubt whatsoever that they will never pull out an unannounced stunt
    that was Labour's "3 waters" reforms.

    Some charities have a very high level of money donated that goes to >>expenses of the charity itself; it does need looking at, but you are
    plain wrong to call Three Waters an unannounced stunt - Announcements
    were made over a long period
    Not one single announcement or hint was given prior to that election - not one>
    You are lying.

    I was not aware of any proposals in relation to taxing Charities.
    There have been provisions agreed for many years that religions and
    charities that run commercial operations have those organisations
    taxed as companies - Sanitarium is the most well known example. I
    have been aware however that at the other end of the scale there are individuals who have created a charity and devote themselves to
    raising money for that charity - but then end up paying themselves
    salary and expenses that are exorbitant; they can be very difficult to determine whether they are legitimate or fraudulent.

    However it now appears that Christopher Luxon is contemplating major
    change to how religions are treated - the mayor of Auckland wants both government and religions to pay rates; Luxon has rejected any change
    by government but may be prepared to insist that religions pay rates
    on property that they own. It may be yet another bright idea from
    Atlas Network, but appears to have taken a lot of people by surprise.


    , but the legislation to enable it to
    happen was not put through parliament prior to the election; what
    National are now proposing is very similar
    Not even close - they are not proposing separatist, so-called co-governance >undemocratic, apartheid processes. And that, nothing else, is the difference >that matters.

    Methinks you protest too much. For just the same reasons as the
    previous government, no amount of rate increases will pay for some
    areas of New Zealand - for example some areas north of Auckland, or
    north of Gisborne, or on the SI West Coast, will be able to afford 3
    waters systems for their local area unless either government pays for
    a lot of it, or they force some councils to work together to hit
    higher density population areas to subside others. In practice despite
    what they say they may still have to spend government money . . .

    - they may still force some
    Councils to work with neighboring Councils even if they do not want
    to, they have adopted structures to suit lenders that are similar to
    those proposed by Labour, but will leave more of the risk and
    operations to local councils who lack the staff and expertise - the
    effect has been that most local bodies are planning rate significant
    rate increases next year 15% - it will increase inflation, but ACT is >>happy, it lowers income tax and moves to a flatter tax system that
    looks after the wealthy and hits the poor with higher taxes.
    With all three government parties having members who have worked for
    the NZ Taxpayer Union and taken the Kool-Aid from the Atlas Network,
    we can expect more of the same from this government

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From BR@21:1/5 to david+usenet@zx.net.nz on Sat Apr 13 18:55:10 2024
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse
    outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social
    housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of
    families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack >> mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any
    significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and
    demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the
    table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property
    owners to vote in local body elections.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the
    total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords
    (total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to
    someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase
    supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer
    people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa.
    $36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9
    month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad
    tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law
    protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord
    is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards
    ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The
    current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Tony@21:1/5 to Rich80105@hotmail.com on Sat Apr 13 06:43:34 2024
    Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com> wrote:
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 19:58:28 -0000 (UTC), Tony
    <lizandtony@orcon.net.nz> wrote:

    Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com> wrote:
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 15:33:28 +1200, Crash <nogood@dontbother.invalid> >>>wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 14:03:10 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com> >>>>wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin >>>>><david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz >>>>>>says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told >>>>>>>us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >>>>>>> outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >>>>>>> housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >>>>>>> families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the >>>>>>>attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting >>>>>>>back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>>>>>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>>>>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>>>>>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>>>>>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the >>>>>>table.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >>>>>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>>>>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords >>>>>>(total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to >>>>>>someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent) >>>>>>
    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>>>>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>>>>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    During recent years important effects on the market have been:
    * An increase in demand for houses - growth in population through >>>>>families and also significant increases in immigration.

    Balanced by increased levels of emigration. Interesting that you >>>>forgot to mention this.
    The net effect was a significant increase in our population, and >>>emigration and immigration may have affected different parts of the >>>property markets, as would have movements to and away from particular >>>locations.

    * The sell-off of State Houses under National-led Governments leading >>>>>to an acute shortage of social housing, or where they were sold to >>>>>local trusts, the reality that those entities did not have enough >>>>>income to expand in those areas, and in some cases were unable to even >>>>>maintain the buildings adequately. (There was for example a shortage >>>>>of social housing in the Wairarapa - it is only more recently that >>>>>government has started building more.

    That was more than 6 years ago. Labour, prior to the 2017 election, >>>>pledged to build 100,000 state houses over 10 years, but had no idea >>>>how they could achieve this. Some were built but in quantities well >>>>short of those pledged.
    There explanation of targets left a bit to be desired - but they still >>>did see a very significant rise in dwellings built over those years.
    Does the current government have any aims to increase housing numbers?

    * Nimby-ism in local areas in resistance to intensification, making >>>>>new developments more expensive,
    * More recently, Auckland deciding to allow intensification, leading >>>>>to a lot of single dwelling sections now having 4 to 6 multi-story >>>>>units . That increased the value of land in some parts of Auckland. >>>>>Wellington has very recently made a similar decision; we have yet to >>>>>see what effect that may have. In both cases, it has or will make the >>>>>problems of services such as supply of water and in some cases power >>>>>more acute.
    * Recent Labour governments undertook a major programme of building >>>>>more social housing, and bringing existing homes up to modern >>>>>standards. Not all rental properties meet those standards.

    That major program did not deliver anything like the quantities >>>>promised. I am surprised you reference what was an abject and >>>>embarrassing failure.
    It was still successful, with a huge number also brought up to healthy >>>home standards. The quantities you refer to were achieved but not >>>necessarily solely by government.


    * Inflation has meant that capital gains have become a more >>>>>significant component of investment returns. Landlords used to >>>>>describe themselves as 'farming capital gains'. The exemption from tax >>>>>on capital gains has applied to owner-occupiers for a long time, but >>>>>it has become more complicated with some owning houses in more than >>>>>one location, buying housing for children (eg while at University), >>>>>then getting some income from it both during that time and between >>>>>family occupancy. This contrasts to most commercial operations for >>>>>which capital gains are taxed on realisation (for both shares and real >>>>>property). Thus for example most New Zealanders will pay tax on >>>>>realised gains generated from share sales in the Kiwisaver portfolio >>>>>they have selected (most Kiwisaver providers do not invest directly in >>>>>property for liquidity reasons, but if they did they would be allowing >>>>>for eventual capital gains tax in the value passed on to investors). >>>>>* Not allowing a tax deduction for interest is a rough way of >>>>>increasing taxable income in lieu of the complications of taxing >>>>>capital gains while exempting that tax for owner-occupied dwellings. >>>>>It discriminates in favour of those that do not need to borrow to >>>>>maintain a property, and the match is not good on an annual basis, but >>>>>is a crude attempt at equity - in effect it is better than nothing, >>>>>and taxing capital gains has different anomalies.
    * It is pleasing to hear that Christopher Luxon will look at tax >>>>>anomalies for charities, but not listen to reason for landlords - >>>>>perhaps self-interest has a part to play . . .

    It is also pleasing to observe a Government that does what it says it >>>>will do. I seriously question some of those commitments but I have no >>>>doubt whatsoever that they will never pull out an unannounced stunt >>>>that was Labour's "3 waters" reforms.

    Some charities have a very high level of money donated that goes to >>>expenses of the charity itself; it does need looking at, but you are >>>plain wrong to call Three Waters an unannounced stunt - Announcements >>>were made over a long period
    Not one single announcement or hint was given prior to that election - not >>one>
    You are lying.

    I was not aware of any proposals in relation to taxing Charities.
    There have been provisions agreed for many years that religions and
    charities that run commercial operations have those organisations
    taxed as companies - Sanitarium is the most well known example. I
    have been aware however that at the other end of the scale there are >individuals who have created a charity and devote themselves to
    raising money for that charity - but then end up paying themselves
    salary and expenses that are exorbitant; they can be very difficult to >determine whether they are legitimate or fraudulent.
    You changed the subject - deliberately, shame on you.

    However it now appears that Christopher Luxon is contemplating major
    change to how religions are treated - the mayor of Auckland wants both >government and religions to pay rates; Luxon has rejected any change
    by government but may be prepared to insist that religions pay rates
    on property that they own. It may be yet another bright idea from
    Atlas Network, but appears to have taken a lot of people by surprise. Horseshit.


    , but the legislation to enable it to
    happen was not put through parliament prior to the election; what >>>National are now proposing is very similar
    Not even close - they are not proposing separatist, so-called co-governance >>undemocratic, apartheid processes. And that, nothing else, is the difference >>that matters.

    Methinks you protest too much. For just the same reasons as the
    previous government, no amount of rate increases will pay for some
    areas of New Zealand - for example some areas north of Auckland, or
    north of Gisborne, or on the SI West Coast, will be able to afford 3
    waters systems for their local area unless either government pays for
    a lot of it, or they force some councils to work together to hit
    higher density population areas to subside others. In practice despite
    what they say they may still have to spend government money . . .
    Off topic - you cannot keep to topic.

    - they may still force some
    Councils to work with neighboring Councils even if they do not want
    to, they have adopted structures to suit lenders that are similar to >>>those proposed by Labour, but will leave more of the risk and
    operations to local councils who lack the staff and expertise - the >>>effect has been that most local bodies are planning rate significant
    rate increases next year 15% - it will increase inflation, but ACT is >>>happy, it lowers income tax and moves to a flatter tax system that
    looks after the wealthy and hits the poor with higher taxes.
    With all three government parties having members who have worked for
    the NZ Taxpayer Union and taken the Kool-Aid from the Atlas Network,
    we can expect more of the same from this government
    Horseshit

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich80105@21:1/5 to blah@blah.blah on Sat Apr 13 19:28:32 2024
    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants >>>
    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >>> this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse
    outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social
    housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of
    families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack >>> mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >>> when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the
    table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property
    owners to vote in local body elections.
    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time, and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents, so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.


    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the
    total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords
    (total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to
    someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa. >$36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9
    month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad
    tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law
    protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord
    is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards
    ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The
    current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that
    the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are
    not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will
    not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market
    will bear. While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor, but we have had periods when it formed a significant part of overall return - and we have also had times where
    an empty house was prone to being broken into . . . Good security is
    much better than it used to be but cannot prevent all damage. Some
    landlords allow rents to 'lag' behind the market for very good
    tenants.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lawrence D'Oliveiro@21:1/5 to David Goodwin on Sat Apr 13 22:04:36 2024
    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin wrote:

    Those houses either get sold to other landlords ...

    Like, possibly Kฤinga Ora, which has a Government mandate to offer housing
    to those less likely to get it from regular โ€œfree marketโ€ sources.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From BR@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 14 19:19:30 2024
    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 19:28:32 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants >>>>
    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >>>> this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >>>> outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >>>> housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >>>> families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack >>>> mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >>>> when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the >>>table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property
    owners to vote in local body elections.


    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time,

    Why did that need to change?

    and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents,

    Don't you mean giving residents a vote in addition to property owners?

    so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.

    One vote per rates bill. I don't see a problem with that.

    There is an argument which says that because a portion of rents go
    towards paying rates, renters are contributing to council expenses and therefore should be given a vote in local body elections. I disagree.
    The portion of rents that go towards rates is so negligible it does
    not justify a vote. Only property owners to whom the rates bill is
    addressed should get a vote in local body elections. The job of local
    councils is maintenance of roads, street lighting, parks etc. If
    people who do not have skin in the game did not have a vote, local
    councillors would behave more like managers and less like politicians,
    which is how it should be.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords >>>(total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to >>>someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa. >>$36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9
    month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad
    tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law
    protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord
    is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards
    ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The
    current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that
    the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are
    not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will
    not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market
    will bear.

    So why did the previous government single out landlords for punishment
    by not allowing interest deductibility if it was never going to help
    renters? Apart from a small increase in tax revenue for the
    government, the only effect it had was to further discourage property
    owners from making their properties available for rent. The current
    government is simply repealing what the last government did. Why is
    that a problem?


    While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor,

    So you would agree that landlords are a group of people that
    governments should be trying very hard not to annoy if they represent
    the best interests of good tenants?

    but we have had periods when it formed a
    significant part of overall return - and we have also had times where
    an empty house was prone to being broken into . . .

    Why? What would there be to steal? This sort of thing is only common
    in a country with a weak criminal justice system.

    Good security is
    much better than it used to be but cannot prevent all damage. Some
    landlords allow rents to 'lag' behind the market for very good
    tenants.

    What nonsense. Landlords often reward good tenants with cheaper rent.
    Tenants that gets behind in their rent are not a good tenants. I've
    got a friend who rented one of his houses to a group of actors who,
    unknown to him at the time, were out of work. They started getting
    behind on their rent, and they were 14 weeks behind by the time he
    finally got rid of them. All the time time there were several cars
    including a beamer parked on the front lawn. They didn't just suddenly
    stop paying; it was a one step forward and two steps back situation.
    It was months before they were finally gone. Such people are able to
    vote in local body elections. This is a large part of why local
    councils have become so damn political and incompetent.

    Bill.

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Crash@21:1/5 to blah@blah.blah on Sun Apr 14 20:31:26 2024
    On Sun, 14 Apr 2024 19:19:30 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 19:28:32 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin >>><david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz >>>>says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants >>>>>
    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >>>>> this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >>>>> outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >>>>> housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >>>>> families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >>>>> when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>>>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>>>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>>>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the >>>>table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property >>>owners to vote in local body elections.


    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time,

    Why did that need to change?

    and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents,

    Don't you mean giving residents a vote in addition to property owners?

    so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.

    One vote per rates bill. I don't see a problem with that.

    There is an argument which says that because a portion of rents go
    towards paying rates, renters are contributing to council expenses and >therefore should be given a vote in local body elections. I disagree.
    The portion of rents that go towards rates is so negligible it does
    not justify a vote. Only property owners to whom the rates bill is
    addressed should get a vote in local body elections. The job of local >councils is maintenance of roads, street lighting, parks etc. If
    people who do not have skin in the game did not have a vote, local >councillors would behave more like managers and less like politicians,
    which is how it should be.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >>>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords >>>>(total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to >>>>someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa. >>>$36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9 >>>month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad >>>tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law >>>protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord
    is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards >>>ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The >>>current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that
    the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are
    not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will
    not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market
    will bear.

    So why did the previous government single out landlords for punishment
    by not allowing interest deductibility if it was never going to help
    renters? Apart from a small increase in tax revenue for the
    government, the only effect it had was to further discourage property
    owners from making their properties available for rent. The current >government is simply repealing what the last government did. Why is
    that a problem?


    While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor,

    So you would agree that landlords are a group of people that
    governments should be trying very hard not to annoy if they represent
    the best interests of good tenants?

    but we have had periods when it formed a
    significant part of overall return - and we have also had times where
    an empty house was prone to being broken into . . .

    Why? What would there be to steal? This sort of thing is only common
    in a country with a weak criminal justice system.

    Good security is
    much better than it used to be but cannot prevent all damage. Some >>landlords allow rents to 'lag' behind the market for very good
    tenants.

    What nonsense. Landlords often reward good tenants with cheaper rent.
    Tenants that gets behind in their rent are not a good tenants. I've
    got a friend who rented one of his houses to a group of actors who,
    unknown to him at the time, were out of work. They started getting
    behind on their rent, and they were 14 weeks behind by the time he
    finally got rid of them. All the time time there were several cars
    including a beamer parked on the front lawn. They didn't just suddenly
    stop paying; it was a one step forward and two steps back situation.
    It was months before they were finally gone. Such people are able to
    vote in local body elections. This is a large part of why local
    councils have become so damn political and incompetent.

    Bill.

    Bill you encapsulate so well the views of those of us who own rental
    properties (some through trusts). The only missing element is that
    Labour rewarded those who owned accommodation but chose to serve the
    short-term property rental market (through the likes of airbnb and
    similar websites in tourist destination localities) - where interest
    costs remained tax-deductible.


    --
    Crash McBash

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich80105@21:1/5 to blah@blah.blah on Sun Apr 14 22:02:24 2024
    On Sun, 14 Apr 2024 19:19:30 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 19:28:32 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin >>><david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz >>>>says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants >>>>>
    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us >>>>> this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >>>>> outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >>>>> housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >>>>> families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back >>>>> when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>>>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>>>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>>>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the >>>>table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property >>>owners to vote in local body elections.


    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time,

    Why did that need to change?
    It was probably associated with the radical idea of Democracy.


    and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents,

    Don't you mean giving residents a vote in addition to property owners?
    Its probably a little more complicated either way - worth reason the
    exact rules, but some are able to vote for other Councils as well
    where they own property


    so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.

    One vote per rates bill. I don't see a problem with that.

    There is an argument which says that because a portion of rents go
    towards paying rates, renters are contributing to council expenses and >therefore should be given a vote in local body elections. I disagree.
    The portion of rents that go towards rates is so negligible it does
    not justify a vote. Only property owners to whom the rates bill is
    addressed should get a vote in local body elections. The job of local >councils is maintenance of roads, street lighting, parks etc. If
    people who do not have skin in the game did not have a vote, local >councillors would behave more like managers and less like politicians,
    which is how it should be.

    Worth looking at the detail. Many people see what we have as
    inconsistent with one person one vote, and would regard what you
    propose as not being democratic. Would you be happy with an election
    for parliament where everyone eligible to vote had as many votes as
    the dollars they paid in income taxes, with shareholders or Directors
    of companies sharing votes based on tax paid by the company? Some
    would view any such changes as representing the destruction of
    democracy; granting additional votes to landlords is not seen as
    justified by many. But your idea may appeal to some political party,
    why not suggest it and see if anyone is prepared to take it further .
    . .?


    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >>>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords >>>>(total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to >>>>someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa. >>>$36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9 >>>month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad >>>tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law >>>protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord
    is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards >>>ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The >>>current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that
    the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are
    not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will
    not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market
    will bear.

    So why did the previous government single out landlords for punishment
    by not allowing interest deductibility if it was never going to help
    renters? Apart from a small increase in tax revenue for the
    government, the only effect it had was to further discourage property
    owners from making their properties available for rent. The current >government is simply repealing what the last government did. Why is
    that a problem?

    It was I suspect looking to correct an extreme distortion of
    investment markets. Why should rental properties have a significantly
    more favourable basis of taxation than other investments such as
    shares, fixed interest, farming, etc.? New Zealand companies find it
    difficult to attract share capital from local markets, which has led
    over time to many of our most profitable and largest companies sending
    a majority of dividends offshore, to the detriment of New Zealand.


    While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor,

    So you would agree that landlords are a group of people that
    governments should be trying very hard not to annoy if they represent
    the best interests of good tenants?
    I am sure some do, but not all do - it could be argued than banks and supermarkets also represent the best interests of users of their
    services, but that does not justify a special lower basis of taxation
    . . .


    but we have had periods when it formed a
    significant part of overall return - and we have also had times where
    an empty house was prone to being broken into . . .

    Why? What would there be to steal? This sort of thing is only common
    in a country with a weak criminal justice system.
    Homeless people and gangs will use empty properties, often causing
    destruction.


    Good security is
    much better than it used to be but cannot prevent all damage. Some >>landlords allow rents to 'lag' behind the market for very good
    tenants.

    What nonsense. Landlords often reward good tenants with cheaper rent.
    Tenants that gets behind in their rent are not a good tenants. I've
    got a friend who rented one of his houses to a group of actors who,
    unknown to him at the time, were out of work. They started getting
    behind on their rent, and they were 14 weeks behind by the time he
    finally got rid of them. All the time time there were several cars
    including a beamer parked on the front lawn. They didn't just suddenly
    stop paying; it was a one step forward and two steps back situation.
    It was months before they were finally gone. Such people are able to
    vote in local body elections. This is a large part of why local
    councils have become so damn political and incompetent.

    Bill.
    So what do you propose, Bill?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David Goodwin@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 15 09:56:59 2024
    In article <3ljm1j533rmmgnoj9knpkguq4esmqfnegs@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah
    says...

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 19:28:32 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin >><david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz >>>says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants >>>>
    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >>>> outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >>>> housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >>>> families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any >>>significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >>>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >>>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the >>>table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property >>owners to vote in local body elections.


    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time,

    Why did that need to change?

    and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents,

    Don't you mean giving residents a vote in addition to property owners?

    so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.

    One vote per rates bill. I don't see a problem with that.

    There is an argument which says that because a portion of rents go
    towards paying rates, renters are contributing to council expenses and therefore should be given a vote in local body elections. I disagree.
    The portion of rents that go towards rates is so negligible it does
    not justify a vote. Only property owners to whom the rates bill is
    addressed should get a vote in local body elections. The job of local councils is maintenance of roads, street lighting, parks etc. If
    people who do not have skin in the game did not have a vote, local councillors would behave more like managers and less like politicians,
    which is how it should be.

    Surely people who actually live in the city should have some say?
    They're the ones who actually use the roads, parks, etc.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords >>>(total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to >>>someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa. >>$36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9 >>month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad >>tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law >>protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord
    is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards >>ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The >>current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that
    the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are
    not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will
    not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market
    will bear.

    So why did the previous government single out landlords for punishment
    by not allowing interest deductibility if it was never going to help
    renters? Apart from a small increase in tax revenue for the
    government, the only effect it had was to further discourage property
    owners from making their properties available for rent. The current government is simply repealing what the last government did. Why is
    that a problem?

    Removing interest deductibility wouldn't have discouraged property
    owners from making their properties available for rent - it raised the
    costs of owning the property if there was a mortgage and so would have
    made leaving properties empty more costly.

    As for why its a problem: The government is clearly short on money given
    the cuts they're making. While the tax revenue may be small its still
    tax revenue they're now missing out of that they could have perhaps used
    to solve one of the many funding issues they're having.

    And why the government may have singled out landlords? Because we'd be
    better off collectively if people invested in companies that led to
    economic growth rather than selling houses to each other and charging
    people a large portion of their income for a roof over their head.

    Thats not to say we should do away with landlords - not everyone can
    afford to buy a house at any given time. But home ownership has declined significantly while house prices skyrocket and sooner or later something
    is going to have to be done to reverse this.

    While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor,

    So you would agree that landlords are a group of people that
    governments should be trying very hard not to annoy if they represent
    the best interests of good tenants?

    Best interests of people who prefer to and choose to rent perhaps. But
    there are many who would prefer to buy a home and can't in part due to a portion of the public owning multiple houses for the rental income and
    untaxed capital gains.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From BR@21:1/5 to david+usenet@zx.net.nz on Thu Apr 18 05:08:40 2024
    On Mon, 15 Apr 2024 09:56:59 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <3ljm1j533rmmgnoj9knpkguq4esmqfnegs@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah >says...

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 19:28:32 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse >> >>>> outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social >> >>>> housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of >> >>>> families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any
    significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and
    demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because >> >>>costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the >> >>>market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the
    table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property
    owners to vote in local body elections.


    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time,

    Why did that need to change?

    and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents,

    Don't you mean giving residents a vote in addition to property owners?

    so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.

    One vote per rates bill. I don't see a problem with that.

    There is an argument which says that because a portion of rents go
    towards paying rates, renters are contributing to council expenses and
    therefore should be given a vote in local body elections. I disagree.
    The portion of rents that go towards rates is so negligible it does
    not justify a vote. Only property owners to whom the rates bill is
    addressed should get a vote in local body elections. The job of local
    councils is maintenance of roads, street lighting, parks etc. If
    people who do not have skin in the game did not have a vote, local
    councillors would behave more like managers and less like politicians,
    which is how it should be.

    Surely people who actually live in the city should have some say?
    They're the ones who actually use the roads, parks, etc.

    Why? They are not paying for them so why should they have an input
    into the management of them?

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the
    total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or
    leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords
    (total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to
    someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase
    supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer
    people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa.
    $36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9
    month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad
    tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law
    protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord
    is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards
    ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The
    current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that
    the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are
    not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will
    not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market
    will bear.

    So why did the previous government single out landlords for punishment
    by not allowing interest deductibility if it was never going to help
    renters? Apart from a small increase in tax revenue for the
    government, the only effect it had was to further discourage property
    owners from making their properties available for rent. The current
    government is simply repealing what the last government did. Why is
    that a problem?

    Removing interest deductibility wouldn't have discouraged property
    owners from making their properties available for rent - it raised the
    costs of owning the property if there was a mortgage and so would have
    made leaving properties empty more costly.

    Have you ever rented a house out to someone? There are many rental
    properties that are mortgaged. Nobody buys another house just to rent
    it out for less ROI than a bank deposit. If that was the only thing in
    it for the house owner, there would be no landlords.

    As for why its a problem: The government is clearly short on money given
    the cuts they're making. While the tax revenue may be small its still
    tax revenue they're now missing out of that they could have perhaps used
    to solve one of the many funding issues they're having.

    Governments should not be raising taxes, they should be substantially
    cutting spending.

    And why the government may have singled out landlords? Because we'd be
    better off collectively if people invested in companies that led to
    economic growth rather than selling houses to each other and charging
    people a large portion of their income for a roof over their head.

    Then governments should tax those other investments less.

    Thats not to say we should do away with landlords - not everyone can
    afford to buy a house at any given time. But home ownership has declined >significantly while house prices skyrocket and sooner or later something
    is going to have to be done to reverse this.

    Getting rid of the odious RMA would be a good first step.

    While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor,

    So you would agree that landlords are a group of people that
    governments should be trying very hard not to annoy if they represent
    the best interests of good tenants?

    Best interests of people who prefer to and choose to rent perhaps. But
    there are many who would prefer to buy a home and can't in part due to a >portion of the public owning multiple houses for the rental income and >untaxed capital gains.

    A capital gains tax would create more of a disincentive for people to
    make their properties available for rent. People who make a living out
    of the turnover of properties are already taxed.

    Most of the people who are in favour of higher taxes are those who
    don't pay any.

    Bill.

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lil-man-ball@21:1/5 to blah@blah.blah on Wed Apr 17 13:07:39 2024
    On Thu, 18 Apr 2024 05:08:40 +1200
    BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    Governments should not be raising taxes, they should be substantially
    cutting spending.

    +1!!!!!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David Goodwin@21:1/5 to All on Thu Apr 18 14:34:58 2024
    In article <m3002jtb9p0e8kikeah8mgmselfd05tbes@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah
    says...

    On Mon, 15 Apr 2024 09:56:59 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <3ljm1j533rmmgnoj9knpkguq4esmqfnegs@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah >says...

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 19:28:32 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse
    outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social
    housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of
    families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any
    significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >> >>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because
    costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the
    market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the
    table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property
    owners to vote in local body elections.


    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time,

    Why did that need to change?

    and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents,

    Don't you mean giving residents a vote in addition to property owners?

    so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.

    One vote per rates bill. I don't see a problem with that.

    There is an argument which says that because a portion of rents go
    towards paying rates, renters are contributing to council expenses and
    therefore should be given a vote in local body elections. I disagree.
    The portion of rents that go towards rates is so negligible it does
    not justify a vote. Only property owners to whom the rates bill is
    addressed should get a vote in local body elections. The job of local
    councils is maintenance of roads, street lighting, parks etc. If
    people who do not have skin in the game did not have a vote, local
    councillors would behave more like managers and less like politicians,
    which is how it should be.

    Surely people who actually live in the city should have some say?
    They're the ones who actually use the roads, parks, etc.

    Why? They are not paying for them so why should they have an input
    into the management of them?

    I guess you think people who aren't currently in paid employment also
    shouldn't be able to vote in national elections? After all, if you're
    not paying tax why should you have any input into how its spent?

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the
    total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >> >>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords
    (total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to
    someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent) >> >>>
    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >> >>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >> >>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa. >> >>$36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9
    month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad
    tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law
    protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord >> >>is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards
    ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The
    current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that
    the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are
    not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will
    not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market
    will bear.

    So why did the previous government single out landlords for punishment
    by not allowing interest deductibility if it was never going to help
    renters? Apart from a small increase in tax revenue for the
    government, the only effect it had was to further discourage property
    owners from making their properties available for rent. The current
    government is simply repealing what the last government did. Why is
    that a problem?

    Removing interest deductibility wouldn't have discouraged property
    owners from making their properties available for rent - it raised the >costs of owning the property if there was a mortgage and so would have
    made leaving properties empty more costly.

    Have you ever rented a house out to someone? There are many rental
    properties that are mortgaged. Nobody buys another house just to rent
    it out for less ROI than a bank deposit. If that was the only thing in
    it for the house owner, there would be no landlords.

    And if there were no landlords then there would be lower demand for
    houses and people might actually have a chance of buying their own home
    rather than paying other peoples mortgages for the rest of their lives.

    As for why its a problem: The government is clearly short on money given >the cuts they're making. While the tax revenue may be small its still
    tax revenue they're now missing out of that they could have perhaps used
    to solve one of the many funding issues they're having.

    Governments should not be raising taxes, they should be substantially
    cutting spending.

    What government services would you like to do away with in order to cut spending?

    And why the government may have singled out landlords? Because we'd be >better off collectively if people invested in companies that led to >economic growth rather than selling houses to each other and charging >people a large portion of their income for a roof over their head.

    Then governments should tax those other investments less.

    Why should wages be taxed and capital gains not taxed? Surely we should
    be taxing all kinds of income equally.

    Thats not to say we should do away with landlords - not everyone can
    afford to buy a house at any given time. But home ownership has declined >significantly while house prices skyrocket and sooner or later something
    is going to have to be done to reverse this.

    Getting rid of the odious RMA would be a good first step.

    Not getting rid of the housing density standards would be an even better
    first step.

    While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor,

    So you would agree that landlords are a group of people that
    governments should be trying very hard not to annoy if they represent
    the best interests of good tenants?

    Best interests of people who prefer to and choose to rent perhaps. But >there are many who would prefer to buy a home and can't in part due to a >portion of the public owning multiple houses for the rental income and >untaxed capital gains.

    A capital gains tax would create more of a disincentive for people to
    make their properties available for rent. People who make a living out
    of the turnover of properties are already taxed.

    As long as it doesn't completely eliminate rentals thats fine; being a
    landlord doesn't really contribute to the economy in any useful way and
    the country would almost certainly be better off with fewer of them. Not everyone is renting out of choice - less demand for houses from
    landlords should drive prices down making home ownership more realistic
    for more people.

    Most of the people who are in favour of higher taxes are those who
    don't pay any.

    Any data to back this up or is this just a guess?

    I'd happily pay higher taxes if it resulted in better government
    services. Some services can be delivered far more efficiently by the
    government than by each person paying for it individually.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich80105@21:1/5 to david+usenet@zx.net.nz on Thu Apr 18 19:52:53 2024
    On Thu, 18 Apr 2024 14:34:58 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <m3002jtb9p0e8kikeah8mgmselfd05tbes@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah >says...

    On Mon, 15 Apr 2024 09:56:59 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <3ljm1j533rmmgnoj9knpkguq4esmqfnegs@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah
    says...

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 19:28:32 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse
    outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social
    housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of
    families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any
    significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >> >> >>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because
    costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the
    market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the
    table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property
    owners to vote in local body elections.


    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time,

    Why did that need to change?

    and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents,

    Don't you mean giving residents a vote in addition to property owners?

    so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.

    One vote per rates bill. I don't see a problem with that.

    There is an argument which says that because a portion of rents go
    towards paying rates, renters are contributing to council expenses and
    therefore should be given a vote in local body elections. I disagree.
    The portion of rents that go towards rates is so negligible it does
    not justify a vote. Only property owners to whom the rates bill is
    addressed should get a vote in local body elections. The job of local
    councils is maintenance of roads, street lighting, parks etc. If
    people who do not have skin in the game did not have a vote, local
    councillors would behave more like managers and less like politicians,
    which is how it should be.

    Surely people who actually live in the city should have some say?
    They're the ones who actually use the roads, parks, etc.

    Why? They are not paying for them so why should they have an input
    into the management of them?

    I guess you think people who aren't currently in paid employment also >shouldn't be able to vote in national elections? After all, if you're
    not paying tax why should you have any input into how its spent?

    It goes further than that - some would have those that pay more tax
    get more votes, with that being restricted to income tax for practical
    reasons. For the most wealthy, there would be a group who pay very
    little or no tax in some years, but that is minor - the real deterrent
    is that it would require the number of votes to be able to be
    identified for each individual so that votes could be counted.

    On balance, most political parties have decided that "One person one
    vote" sufficiently meets their needs; particularly when there is no
    limit on donations to buy the result anyone wants.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >> >> >>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >> >> >>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords
    (total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to
    someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent) >> >> >>>
    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >> >> >>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >> >> >>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa. >> >> >>$36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9 >> >> >>month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad
    tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law
    protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord >> >> >>is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards
    ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The
    current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that
    the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are
    not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will >> >> >not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market
    will bear.

    So why did the previous government single out landlords for punishment
    by not allowing interest deductibility if it was never going to help
    renters? Apart from a small increase in tax revenue for the
    government, the only effect it had was to further discourage property
    owners from making their properties available for rent. The current
    government is simply repealing what the last government did. Why is
    that a problem?

    Removing interest deductibility wouldn't have discouraged property
    owners from making their properties available for rent - it raised the
    costs of owning the property if there was a mortgage and so would have
    made leaving properties empty more costly.

    Have you ever rented a house out to someone? There are many rental
    properties that are mortgaged. Nobody buys another house just to rent
    it out for less ROI than a bank deposit. If that was the only thing in
    it for the house owner, there would be no landlords.

    And if there were no landlords then there would be lower demand for
    houses and people might actually have a chance of buying their own home >rather than paying other peoples mortgages for the rest of their lives.

    As for why its a problem: The government is clearly short on money given
    the cuts they're making. While the tax revenue may be small its still
    tax revenue they're now missing out of that they could have perhaps used
    to solve one of the many funding issues they're having.

    Governments should not be raising taxes, they should be substantially
    cutting spending.

    What government services would you like to do away with in order to cut >spending?

    And why the government may have singled out landlords? Because we'd be
    better off collectively if people invested in companies that led to
    economic growth rather than selling houses to each other and charging
    people a large portion of their income for a roof over their head.

    Then governments should tax those other investments less.

    Why should wages be taxed and capital gains not taxed? Surely we should
    be taxing all kinds of income equally.
    We have exempted owner occupied homes because it would make it very
    difficult for most people to move - they need the proceeds of any sale
    to buy in another place, but that has been distorted by the wealthy
    realising that persistently deferring paying tax on capital gains
    makes great investment sense, so there is always great pressure from
    those with money for that distortion . . .


    Thats not to say we should do away with landlords - not everyone can
    afford to buy a house at any given time. But home ownership has declined
    significantly while house prices skyrocket and sooner or later something
    is going to have to be done to reverse this.

    Getting rid of the odious RMA would be a good first step.

    Not getting rid of the housing density standards would be an even better >first step.

    While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor,

    So you would agree that landlords are a group of people that
    governments should be trying very hard not to annoy if they represent
    the best interests of good tenants?

    Best interests of people who prefer to and choose to rent perhaps. But
    there are many who would prefer to buy a home and can't in part due to a
    portion of the public owning multiple houses for the rental income and
    untaxed capital gains.

    A capital gains tax would create more of a disincentive for people to
    make their properties available for rent. People who make a living out
    of the turnover of properties are already taxed.

    As long as it doesn't completely eliminate rentals thats fine; being a >landlord doesn't really contribute to the economy in any useful way and
    the country would almost certainly be better off with fewer of them. Not >everyone is renting out of choice - less demand for houses from
    landlords should drive prices down making home ownership more realistic
    for more people.

    Most of the people who are in favour of higher taxes are those who
    don't pay any.

    Any data to back this up or is this just a guess?

    I'd happily pay higher taxes if it resulted in better government
    services. Some services can be delivered far more efficiently by the >government than by each person paying for it individually.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From BR@21:1/5 to david+usenet@zx.net.nz on Sat Apr 20 19:31:57 2024
    On Thu, 18 Apr 2024 14:34:58 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <m3002jtb9p0e8kikeah8mgmselfd05tbes@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah >says...

    On Mon, 15 Apr 2024 09:56:59 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <3ljm1j533rmmgnoj9knpkguq4esmqfnegs@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah
    says...

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 19:28:32 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse
    outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social
    housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of
    families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any
    significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >> >> >>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because
    costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the
    market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the
    table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property
    owners to vote in local body elections.


    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time,

    Why did that need to change?

    and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents,

    Don't you mean giving residents a vote in addition to property owners?

    so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.

    One vote per rates bill. I don't see a problem with that.

    There is an argument which says that because a portion of rents go
    towards paying rates, renters are contributing to council expenses and
    therefore should be given a vote in local body elections. I disagree.
    The portion of rents that go towards rates is so negligible it does
    not justify a vote. Only property owners to whom the rates bill is
    addressed should get a vote in local body elections. The job of local
    councils is maintenance of roads, street lighting, parks etc. If
    people who do not have skin in the game did not have a vote, local
    councillors would behave more like managers and less like politicians,
    which is how it should be.

    Surely people who actually live in the city should have some say?
    They're the ones who actually use the roads, parks, etc.

    Why? They are not paying for them so why should they have an input
    into the management of them?

    I guess you think people who aren't currently in paid employment also >shouldn't be able to vote in national elections? After all, if you're
    not paying tax why should you have any input into how its spent?

    You guess wrong.

    Local council elections are not the same as general elections.
    Governments govern and councils manage, or at least that was the
    original intent. When everyone is allowed a vote in local councils,
    the council is incentivised to appease political sensibilities. That
    is why councils have become so wasteful and incompetent. They are so
    busy trying to kiss up to every fool with an agenda that core business
    is compromised in favour of nonsense like mitigating so-called man
    made climate change and painting multi coloured pedestrian crossings.

    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >> >> >>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or >> >> >>>leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords
    (total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to
    someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent) >> >> >>>
    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >> >> >>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >> >> >>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa. >> >> >>$36,400 ๗ $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9 >> >> >>month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad
    tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law
    protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord >> >> >>is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out.

    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than
    13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards
    ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The
    current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that
    the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are
    not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will >> >> >not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market
    will bear.

    So why did the previous government single out landlords for punishment
    by not allowing interest deductibility if it was never going to help
    renters? Apart from a small increase in tax revenue for the
    government, the only effect it had was to further discourage property
    owners from making their properties available for rent. The current
    government is simply repealing what the last government did. Why is
    that a problem?

    Removing interest deductibility wouldn't have discouraged property
    owners from making their properties available for rent - it raised the
    costs of owning the property if there was a mortgage and so would have
    made leaving properties empty more costly.

    Have you ever rented a house out to someone? There are many rental
    properties that are mortgaged. Nobody buys another house just to rent
    it out for less ROI than a bank deposit. If that was the only thing in
    it for the house owner, there would be no landlords.

    And if there were no landlords then there would be lower demand for
    houses and people might actually have a chance of buying their own home >rather than paying other peoples mortgages for the rest of their lives.

    There are two main reasons for high house prices. One is the RMA and
    the exorbitant level of fees, delays and bureaucracy it imposes on
    property developers. In a 3rd world country, if you want to get
    something done you have to bribe officials. In NZ if you want to get
    something done, you have to bribe officials. The difference is that in
    3rd world countries this is illegal, but in NZ it is required. The
    price of permission to build houses is inevitably transferred onto the
    cost of buying them.

    Th other reason is immigration. Many low skilled jobs that were
    traditionally done by NZers are now being done by immigrants. They all
    have to live somewhere. This obviously puts upward pressure on the
    housing market.

    As for why its a problem: The government is clearly short on money given
    the cuts they're making. While the tax revenue may be small its still
    tax revenue they're now missing out of that they could have perhaps used
    to solve one of the many funding issues they're having.

    Governments should not be raising taxes, they should be substantially
    cutting spending.

    What government services would you like to do away with in order to cut >spending?

    How about the office of the race relations conciliator? That should be
    the first to go. It would take a fertile imagination to invent a more
    useless waste of taxpayer's money than that. Next, anything and
    everything to do with man made climate change; gone by lunchtime.
    Anything and everything to do with the Waitangi tribunal and all
    tribal payouts should cease forthwith. The womens commission, the
    childrens commission and all the other useless commissions. What do
    they do apart from making speeches and writing long winded reports?
    Get rid of them. The arts council, NZ on air,TVNZ, RNZ and the film
    commission. Complete waste of time, space and money and should be
    gone. If you want to see more, go to the government website, look up
    government departments and go down the list. If over half of them were
    removed, few people outside their immediate purview would notice them
    missing, and many would be pleasantly surprised at not having to deal
    any more with all the bureaucracy, stickybeaking and petty
    enforcement.

    And why the government may have singled out landlords? Because we'd be
    better off collectively if people invested in companies that led to
    economic growth rather than selling houses to each other and charging
    people a large portion of their income for a roof over their head.

    Then governments should tax those other investments less.

    Why should wages be taxed and capital gains not taxed? Surely we should
    be taxing all kinds of income equally.

    What capital gains should be taxed? How about a tax on inflation? What
    if you buy a classic car and three years later sell it for a profit?
    Should that be taxed, or do you only want capital gains tax on real
    estate? How about if there is a drop in property values, should a
    property owner be eligible for a tax refund?

    Thats not to say we should do away with landlords - not everyone can
    afford to buy a house at any given time. But home ownership has declined
    significantly while house prices skyrocket and sooner or later something
    is going to have to be done to reverse this.

    Getting rid of the odious RMA would be a good first step.

    Not getting rid of the housing density standards would be an even better >first step.

    You won't get any argument from me about that. Build out, not up.

    While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor,

    So you would agree that landlords are a group of people that
    governments should be trying very hard not to annoy if they represent
    the best interests of good tenants?

    Best interests of people who prefer to and choose to rent perhaps. But
    there are many who would prefer to buy a home and can't in part due to a
    portion of the public owning multiple houses for the rental income and
    untaxed capital gains.

    A capital gains tax would create more of a disincentive for people to
    make their properties available for rent. People who make a living out
    of the turnover of properties are already taxed.

    As long as it doesn't completely eliminate rentals thats fine; being a >landlord doesn't really contribute to the economy in any useful way and
    the country would almost certainly be better off with fewer of them.

    Government doesn't contribute to the economy either, but it keeps
    expanding nonetheless, particularly during Labour's tenure, devouring
    the productive sector as it does so. How many landlords should there
    be, and who or what decides? How much rental property should
    governments be in charge of? I would argue none.

    Not
    everyone is renting out of choice - less demand for houses from
    landlords should drive prices down making home ownership more realistic
    for more people.

    So would you be in favour of getting rid of the RMA?

    Most of the people who are in favour of higher taxes are those who
    don't pay any.

    Any data to back this up or is this just a guess?

    C'mon! How many beneficiaries have you ever heard of who don't believe
    "the rich" should pay more tax?

    There is a constant drumbeat from the left of politics demanding that
    taxes on "the rich" should increase. These "rich" already pay more,
    much more. It is difficult to find statistics on this, but here are
    some are old statistics (2017) from the US federal tax figures:

    Top 1% pay 39.5% of all federal taxes.
    Top 5% pay 60.0% of all federal taxes.
    Top 10% pay 70.9% of all federal taxes.
    Top 25% pay 86.8% of all federal taxes.
    Top 50% pay 97.3% of all federal taxes.
    Bottom 50% pay 2.8% of all federal taxes.

    This uneven contribution to the tax account is typical of all
    progressive tax systems. Maybe it's not just landlords that
    governments should be trying hard not to piss off, yeah?

    I'd happily pay higher taxes if it resulted in better government
    services.

    Ok, so you already know that paying higher taxes won't result in
    better government services, so why are you advocating for it?
    Shouldn't you be in favour of a reduction instead?

    Some services can be delivered far more efficiently by the
    government than by each person paying for it individually.

    Really? What services would these be?

    When you spend your money on yourself, you are careful how much you
    spend and how well you spend it.
    When you spend your money on somebody else, you are careful how much
    you spend but don't care how well you spend it.
    When you spend somebody else's money on yourself, you don't care how
    much you spend but are careful about how well you spend it.
    When you spend somebody else's money on somebody else, you don't care
    how much you spend or how well you spend it. That's the government.

    User pays is far more efficient than charging everyone for services
    that only some people use. I realise that's not possible for
    everything, but user pays should be implemented wherever possible.

    Bill.

    --
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  • From Gordon@21:1/5 to blah@blah.blah on Sat Apr 20 08:08:57 2024
    On 2024-04-20, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:
    On Thu, 18 Apr 2024 14:34:58 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <m3002jtb9p0e8kikeah8mgmselfd05tbes@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah >>says...

    On Mon, 15 Apr 2024 09:56:59 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <3ljm1j533rmmgnoj9knpkguq4esmqfnegs@4ax.com>, blah@blah.blah >>> >says...

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 19:28:32 +1200, Rich80105 <Rich80105@hotmail.com> >>> >> wrote:

    On Sat, 13 Apr 2024 18:55:10 +1200, BR <blah@blah.blah> wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 12:16:37 +1200, David Goodwin
    <david+usenet@zx.net.nz> wrote:

    In article <l7r43oFepucU1@mid.individual.net>, Gordon@leaf.net.nz
    says...

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/money/350242820/changes-coming-landlords-tenants

    "The previous Government waged a war on landlords. Many landlords told us
    this caused them to exit the rental market altogether. It caused worse
    outcomes for tenants: rents up by $170 per week since 2017, the social
    housing waitlist increasing by about 20,000 families, and thousands of
    families living in emergency housing motels,? Bishop said.

    This was forecast by the thinking person when Labour, went into the attack
    mode on the landlords with some strong back up from the Greens.

    Good to see that this Government is making an improvement by putting back
    when they worked. A win win situation.

    There is nothing to indicate that interest deductability has any
    significant impact on rents. Rents are set by the market - supply and >>> >> >>>demand. Because of this we shouldn't expect rent to go down just because
    costs for landlords are going down - they'll still charge as much as the
    market will bear because charging less is just leaving money on the >>> >> >>>table.

    You could apply that same argument to rates and allow only property >>> >> >>owners to vote in local body elections.


    I am not sure I follow that argument; can you explain it a little
    more? We did have votes based on ownership at one time,

    Why did that need to change?

    and that has
    been retained by giving property owners a vote in addition to
    residents,

    Don't you mean giving residents a vote in addition to property owners? >>> >>
    so some landlords will have more than one vote in different
    local electorates, even if they are not resident in all of those.

    One vote per rates bill. I don't see a problem with that.

    There is an argument which says that because a portion of rents go
    towards paying rates, renters are contributing to council expenses and >>> >> therefore should be given a vote in local body elections. I disagree. >>> >> The portion of rents that go towards rates is so negligible it does
    not justify a vote. Only property owners to whom the rates bill is
    addressed should get a vote in local body elections. The job of local >>> >> councils is maintenance of roads, street lighting, parks etc. If
    people who do not have skin in the game did not have a vote, local
    councillors would behave more like managers and less like politicians, >>> >> which is how it should be.

    Surely people who actually live in the city should have some say?
    They're the ones who actually use the roads, parks, etc.

    Why? They are not paying for them so why should they have an input
    into the management of them?

    I guess you think people who aren't currently in paid employment also >>shouldn't be able to vote in national elections? After all, if you're
    not paying tax why should you have any input into how its spent?

    You guess wrong.

    Local council elections are not the same as general elections.
    Governments govern and councils manage, or at least that was the
    original intent. When everyone is allowed a vote in local councils,
    the council is incentivised to appease political sensibilities. That
    is why councils have become so wasteful and incompetent. They are so
    busy trying to kiss up to every fool with an agenda that core business
    is compromised in favour of nonsense like mitigating so-called man
    made climate change and painting multi coloured pedestrian crossings.

    The reason for this is the low turn out at the local body elections. The ratepayers are mostly uninterested as long as the rate do not go too high.
    So the Council has not large public body to keep them in check.

    We get the Councils and Governments we deserve, as the saying goes.



    Additionally, landlords exiting the rental market doesn't reduce the >>> >> >>>total number of houses unless they're demolishing them out of spite or
    leaving them empty. Those houses either get sold to other landlords >>> >> >>>(total number of rental properites stays the same), or get sold to >>> >> >>>someone who intends to live in it (one less household needing to rent)

    If this government wants to reduce rents they either need to increase >>> >> >>>supply (build *new* houses), or reduce demand (fewer people, or fewer >>> >> >>>people needing/wanting to rent).

    Rental income is chump change to a property investor.

    A 3 bedroom house in Auckland worth about a mill would typically
    attract a rental return of about $700pw. That's $700 x 52 = $36,400pa. >>> >> >>$36,400 รท $1,000,000 = 3.64% return on investment. By comparison, a 9 >>> >> >>month term deposit with ASB currently pays 6.1%pa.

    None of this takes property maintenance and other expenses into
    account, and also assumes that the property has ideal tenants. A bad >>> >> >>tenant can bring the hammer down on the deal very quickly. The law
    protects bad tenants because when they become a liability the landlord >>> >> >>is forced to jump through legal hoops before he can throw them out. >>> >> >>
    When I was a landlord about 25 years ago, I was getting better than >>> >> >>13% ROI, and in those days the law was a lot less favourable towards >>> >> >>ratbag tenants. If I had a house available for rent today, I would
    either rent it to someone I knew personally or leave it empty. The
    current economic and political climate makes property rental very
    risky.

    Bill.

    Thanks Bill. Your good summary which I believe supports my view that >>> >> >the changes the government is making to deductibility of interest are >>> >> >not likely to affect rates of rent at all, and for most landlords will >>> >> >not prompt any reduction in rents - they will charge what the market >>> >> >will bear.

    So why did the previous government single out landlords for punishment >>> >> by not allowing interest deductibility if it was never going to help
    renters? Apart from a small increase in tax revenue for the
    government, the only effect it had was to further discourage property >>> >> owners from making their properties available for rent. The current
    government is simply repealing what the last government did. Why is
    that a problem?

    Removing interest deductibility wouldn't have discouraged property
    owners from making their properties available for rent - it raised the
    costs of owning the property if there was a mortgage and so would have
    made leaving properties empty more costly.

    Have you ever rented a house out to someone? There are many rental
    properties that are mortgaged. Nobody buys another house just to rent
    it out for less ROI than a bank deposit. If that was the only thing in
    it for the house owner, there would be no landlords.

    And if there were no landlords then there would be lower demand for
    houses and people might actually have a chance of buying their own home >>rather than paying other peoples mortgages for the rest of their lives.

    There are two main reasons for high house prices. One is the RMA and
    the exorbitant level of fees, delays and bureaucracy it imposes on
    property developers. In a 3rd world country, if you want to get
    something done you have to bribe officials. In NZ if you want to get something done, you have to bribe officials. The difference is that in
    3rd world countries this is illegal, but in NZ it is required. The
    price of permission to build houses is inevitably transferred onto the
    cost of buying them.

    Th other reason is immigration. Many low skilled jobs that were
    traditionally done by NZers are now being done by immigrants. They all
    have to live somewhere. This obviously puts upward pressure on the
    housing market.

    As for why its a problem: The government is clearly short on money given >>> >the cuts they're making. While the tax revenue may be small its still
    tax revenue they're now missing out of that they could have perhaps used >>> >to solve one of the many funding issues they're having.

    Governments should not be raising taxes, they should be substantially
    cutting spending.

    What government services would you like to do away with in order to cut >>spending?

    How about the office of the race relations conciliator? That should be
    the first to go. It would take a fertile imagination to invent a more
    useless waste of taxpayer's money than that. Next, anything and
    everything to do with man made climate change; gone by lunchtime.
    Anything and everything to do with the Waitangi tribunal and all
    tribal payouts should cease forthwith. The womens commission, the
    childrens commission and all the other useless commissions. What do
    they do apart from making speeches and writing long winded reports?
    Get rid of them. The arts council, NZ on air,TVNZ, RNZ and the film commission. Complete waste of time, space and money and should be
    gone. If you want to see more, go to the government website, look up government departments and go down the list. If over half of them were removed, few people outside their immediate purview would notice them missing, and many would be pleasantly surprised at not having to deal
    any more with all the bureaucracy, stickybeaking and petty
    enforcement.

    And why the government may have singled out landlords? Because we'd be
    better off collectively if people invested in companies that led to
    economic growth rather than selling houses to each other and charging
    people a large portion of their income for a roof over their head.

    Then governments should tax those other investments less.

    Why should wages be taxed and capital gains not taxed? Surely we should
    be taxing all kinds of income equally.

    What capital gains should be taxed? How about a tax on inflation? What
    if you buy a classic car and three years later sell it for a profit?
    Should that be taxed, or do you only want capital gains tax on real
    estate? How about if there is a drop in property values, should a
    property owner be eligible for a tax refund?

    Thats not to say we should do away with landlords - not everyone can
    afford to buy a house at any given time. But home ownership has declined >>> >significantly while house prices skyrocket and sooner or later something >>> >is going to have to be done to reverse this.

    Getting rid of the odious RMA would be a good first step.

    Not getting rid of the housing density standards would be an even better >>first step.

    You won't get any argument from me about that. Build out, not up.

    While I appreciate that with rising property values, rent
    may appear to be quite minor,

    So you would agree that landlords are a group of people that
    governments should be trying very hard not to annoy if they represent >>> >> the best interests of good tenants?

    Best interests of people who prefer to and choose to rent perhaps. But
    there are many who would prefer to buy a home and can't in part due to a >>> >portion of the public owning multiple houses for the rental income and
    untaxed capital gains.

    A capital gains tax would create more of a disincentive for people to
    make their properties available for rent. People who make a living out
    of the turnover of properties are already taxed.

    As long as it doesn't completely eliminate rentals thats fine; being a >>landlord doesn't really contribute to the economy in any useful way and
    the country would almost certainly be better off with fewer of them.

    Government doesn't contribute to the economy either, but it keeps
    expanding nonetheless, particularly during Labour's tenure, devouring
    the productive sector as it does so. How many landlords should there
    be, and who or what decides? How much rental property should
    governments be in charge of? I would argue none.

    Not
    everyone is renting out of choice - less demand for houses from
    landlords should drive prices down making home ownership more realistic
    for more people.

    So would you be in favour of getting rid of the RMA?

    Most of the people who are in favour of higher taxes are those who
    don't pay any.

    Any data to back this up or is this just a guess?

    C'mon! How many beneficiaries have you ever heard of who don't believe
    "the rich" should pay more tax?

    There is a constant drumbeat from the left of politics demanding that
    taxes on "the rich" should increase. These "rich" already pay more,
    much more. It is difficult to find statistics on this, but here are
    some are old statistics (2017) from the US federal tax figures:

    Top 1% pay 39.5% of all federal taxes.
    Top 5% pay 60.0% of all federal taxes.
    Top 10% pay 70.9% of all federal taxes.
    Top 25% pay 86.8% of all federal taxes.
    Top 50% pay 97.3% of all federal taxes.
    Bottom 50% pay 2.8% of all federal taxes.

    This uneven contribution to the tax account is typical of all
    progressive tax systems. Maybe it's not just landlords that
    governments should be trying hard not to piss off, yeah?

    I'd happily pay higher taxes if it resulted in better government
    services.

    Ok, so you already know that paying higher taxes won't result in
    better government services, so why are you advocating for it?
    Shouldn't you be in favour of a reduction instead?

    Some services can be delivered far more efficiently by the
    government than by each person paying for it individually.

    Really? What services would these be?

    When you spend your money on yourself, you are careful how much you
    spend and how well you spend it.
    When you spend your money on somebody else, you are careful how much
    you spend but don't care how well you spend it.
    When you spend somebody else's money on yourself, you don't care how
    much you spend but are careful about how well you spend it.
    When you spend somebody else's money on somebody else, you don't care
    how much you spend or how well you spend it. That's the government.

    User pays is far more efficient than charging everyone for services
    that only some people use. I realise that's not possible for
    everything, but user pays should be implemented wherever possible.

    Bill.


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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)