ESRI Report exposes scandalous abuse by speculators and banks

Mortgages should be immediately re-assessed and reduced. Commenting on the “Negative equity in the Irish Housing Market” report from the ESRI, Joe Higgins MEP said…

Mortgages should be immediately re-assessed and reduced. Commenting on the “Negative equity in the Irish Housing Market” report from the ESRI, Joe Higgins MEP said…
“The report by the ESRI on negative equity in the Irish housing market exposes the black hole that Irish householders were lead into by the speculators and the banks.  The ESRI estimates that up to one third of mortgage holders, nearly 200,000 householders, could be trapped with mortgages vastly exceeding the value of their homes by the end of 2010.  And even this is based on a conservative estimate of the drop in house price levels.

“This is nothing short of a major theft of billions of euro from ordinary workers and their families and particularly from the generation of young people cajoled into 35 and 40 year mortgages.  Some of this generation will not see the value of their homes rise above their mortgages for another 12 years.  Coupled with the phenomenal increase in unemployment and the rising numbers of mortgage holders experiencing repayment problems, this is a major crisis in the making.

“And while the banks will see their bad debts taken on by the taxpayer, there is no NAMA solution for home owners.  Not a single cent should be given to bailout the banks who made billions off the backs of workers and householders and not a single house should be repossessed. These banks should be immediately taken into public ownership, under democratic control and the principal of mortgages immediately reassessed and reduced to affordable levels in line with the true value of the home.

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

On Death Row for 30 years Free Mumia Abu-Jamal

Next Article

The cul-de-sac of dissident republicanism

Related Posts
Read More

Promissory Notes madness must end!

Much debate has arisen recently on the promissory notes debacle and its impact on the economy.  The issue seems to be clouded in mystery and many people may have shied away from it believing it to be yet another complex financial problem. The reality is that such discussions are generally made to seem difficult to grasp by the establishment and its media, to cover-up the story’s scandalous nature. This is exactly what is happening with the promissory notes.

Read More

EU youth guarantee – what is it worth?

Almost one in four young people in the European Union are currently unemployed. In Greece this figure hits 57%, in Spain 56%, in Ireland it is 29%. In total 5.5 million young people are unemployed across Europe and emigration is rife, with people leaving Ireland in numbers not seen since the Famine. In the face of this crisis the European Union has no solution to offer, its latest proposal a ‘Youth Guarantee’ is nothing more than wishful thinking.