I'm With Stupid
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 6 May 2013
- Messages
- 20,348
Absolutely, but that doesn't mean that the way they're going about it isn't harmful when repeated on a huge countrywide scale. Housing is a finite resource, and an essential for people to live. We have laws against scalping and price gouging even with non-essential things like concert tickets, yet we basically allow the stockpiling of housing for profit to continue unabated. It's all well and good to ask what other option people have for retirement, but what about the people forced to rent all their life? We've got a generation of people who will end up having to retire without any property to their name to fund some extra comfort for the few who have a surplus of housing to sell for their retirement (or pass on to their kids without paying any tax on it, as almost all of the people who are arguing in favour of landlords on this thread have also been arguing for on the inheritance tax thread).Most landlords are far from scum or greedy most just want a bit of pension money
Obviously it's not as black and white as ticket scalpers, because to some extent, we will always need rental properties and therefore landlords. People move around and can't be expected to buy all the time. Others are never going to get their shit together enough to ever buy, even if it's made extremely easy (but that's what social housing is for). However, we've had decades where we're not just accepting landlords as a necessary part of society, we're actually encouraging them. And I think it's accurate to point out the harm that this 'buy property to retire on' philosophy has caused on the macro scale.
Even the proliferation of this word 'property' shows how attitudes to houses have changed over the past few decades.
But in terms of the strength of feeling about landlords, when there are millions of people who are struggling to get on the property ladder, they really are seen like the ticket touts, the people who buy all the PS5s and sell them on Ebay for 3 times the price, or someone buying up all the PPE during covid.