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    10 commenti

    1. predictivanalyte on

      There is a big bubble up for popping, so prepare for war, younger generation.

    2. Electrical-River-992 on

      It is a sad truth, but we must accept that:

      – we can’t push the mountains away to create more flatland.
      – we have voted YES to preventing the agricultural coutryside from being eaten away by new building plots (which is a good thing)

      So in short, the age of « affordable » house-buying is pretty much over.

    3. Gwendolan on

      Interestingly, were we are at home (lake of Zurich region) we even can’t afford buying a house for our family with a top 5% household income… It’s all just about capital and inheritance, no chance earning the money you need for a single family house even with good careers (let alone at an age at which it would be interesting for raising your kids in it).

    4. Rare_Suspect1472 on

      Wtf is that last statement from the ubs guy? If you look only at people who can afford a home it looks less dramatic? Am I understanding something wrong?

    5. Allesmoeglichee on

      It’s artificial limitation of land, there is plenty of agricultural land that would be suitable for rezoning. Sadly I don’t see that happening any time soon

    6. _quantum_girl_ on

      Here is one idea: establish a progressive health insurance scheme, that is proportional to net worth and salaries.

    7. aphex2000 on

      different view point and a controversial opinion, but the idea/dream/goal that everyone has to start a family, pop out a few kids and move into a single family home is outdated and has always had a deadline looming, it’s only becoming more visible now. this idea does not scale, period.

      it is also increasingly unfair, as the more private ownership you have, the more inefficient allocation to living space you get, esp in a small country with even smaller usable residential area – grandma alone in her 3 story house, lucky artist kid with no income inheriting that house a few years later thanks to the genetic lottery, etc.

      i rather have large, tall (yes, revise those zoning laws) buildings owned by pensions funds and other institutional investors and keep a renters market because it makes the allocation more efficient and everyone profits from the appreciating assets instead of just a few and combats things like NIMBYism

    8. simple_jack_69 on

      How many home owners actually bought the property vs inherited it? Oldest son always gets the farm…

    9. HubaBubaAruba on

      Don’t buy houses here. If you want a house, move out. Vote for legislation that hits the most egregious space-wasting owners (higher property tax, tax on low density housing), so that owning becomes less lucrative. Pay for construction with public money and make these apartments available for low rent as an alternative to owning.

      Or keep things the way they are, but shut up about it. If you don’t want change don’t fucking complain, OK?

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