| Snow178's profileCarl's spaceBlogGuestbookNetwork | Help |
|
|
July 28 Saving Mortgage Insurance for First Home BuyersThis blog is to publicise an idea I
had that would reduce mortgage insurance for a large proportion of
first home buyers. I have forwarded this idea to Arch Bevis my local
Labour MP, but he just sent me back a letter saying that the government
was spending $1.2 Billion here and $500 million there etc......... and
did not address this idea at all. So I will explain it quickly to you,
then include the letter I sent to my local labour member and hopefully
if enough people see this and promote it maybe it will happen. Firstly: At present a first home buyer can have no deposit, but provided they have somebody (typically a relative/parent) prepared to go guarantor for 20% of the value they do not have to pay mortgage insurance. NOTE: This money does not have to be provided as the deposit, they can still borrow 100% somebody just has to go guarantor so no actual money has to change hands............. Secondly: Nowadays people tend to have been in the workforce for some considerable time before they buy their first homes and so will have accumulated some funds most probably significant funds in their superannuation before they go to buy their first house. So........ Thirdly: First home buyers should be able to use their superannuation to go 'guarantor' for as much of the deposit as possible reducing the amount they need to pay in mortgage insurance. This would not cause significant increases in demand for property prices where the extra money saved would simply be eaten up by increased house prices, and it would mean first home buyers have a chance of keeping some or most of their first home owners grant rather than simply handing it over in mortgage insurance as currently happens if they are not fortunate enough to have parents with the equity to go guarantor for the 20% deposit or are unwilling to. Just as per with the arrangement where parents go guarantor, no money actually changes hand and the money stays in their superannuation for their retirement. If the situation arose where they were going to lose their house they could access their super anyway so the net effect on super is essentially neutral - the main effect is that first home buyers pay much less in mortgage insurance (which I believe has to be one of the most profitable insurances and which is 'money for jam' so to speak). Please find below the email I sent to my local Labour member and if anybody is interested I will post his reply..... Dear Arch, Before
explaining my policy idea I need to lay the basis for it. At present a
person can get a 100% loan on a property without paying Mortgage
Insurance if they have a parent or other such benefactor who has the
equity and is willing to provide guarantor for 20% of that properties
value, without any money actually changing hands and which of course
would only be called upon in the instance of a mortgagee sale where the
sale price did not meet the amount borrowed against that property under
which circumstances the person who went guarantor is liable for the
difference up to the pre-defined maximum of 20% of the properties
purchase price. Given
that on say a modest $265,000 property the mortgage insurance is about
equivalent to the first home owners grant, I would suggest that in a
large percentage of cases the first home owners grant (given one has to
have 20% deposit before not requiring mortgage insurance) goes directly
to fund the mortgage insurance of many first home buyers. Now
I know there is a principle that ones Compulsory Superannuation cannot
be touched except in the direst and very specific circumstances, I
understand that suggesting anything involving Compulsory Superannuation
is almost taboo, but I would suggest that Mortgage Insurance is one of
the most profitable forms of insurance provided in the market and any
measure that reduces the amount that a first home buyer has to pay in
Mortgage Insurance is a good thing and that first home buyers are
getting older and may have significant amounts in their compulsory
superannuation I would suggest that just as a parent can go guarantor
for a percentage of the deposit without actually handing the funds over
except in a mortgagee sale, that one allows home buyers to provide
their compulsory superannuation accumulations as a form of guarantor,
hence reducing the exorbitant mortgage insurance fees. In most cases
this would never be used, and as I understand it if one stands to lose
ones house one has a reasonable chance of accessing their super to
avoid doing so in any case - so I would suggest that the actual affect
on the nations superannuation savings would be negligible by
introducing a policy such as this, but the majority of especially first
home owners would benefit greatly in reduced mortgage insurance costs -
which is just dead money........... or easy money for the insurer. I am
sure if the actuaries got to work and calculated the "Expected Value"
of what the average borrower would lose from their superannuation it
would be minuscule in comparison to the "Expected Value" of most first
home buyers income insurance. Noting that Mortgage Insurance definitely
and definitively reduces a persons wealth by the amount paid - even
more considering people effectively have to borrow it and pay it off
over the life of the mortgage making the actual cost multiples of the
original mortgage insurance amount. In
this proposal I can only see home owners winning and mortgage insurers
losing. Of course most superannuation is based on share market
investments and so the amount calculated as guaranteed will be smaller
than were their superannuation held as cash in the bank (a very
conservative superannuation position unlikely to be held by most young
people) so there may have to be some de-rating of the actual balance of
their insurance when calculating how much of a guarantee it can
provide, but I doubt that would be a significant hurdle. Also
on another note: The rental market: My separated-wife and I still live
together simply because in todays rental market, both of us would have
trouble finding anywhere to rent (and it would be a significant step
down for both of us). Also tenancy agreements are such that at the end
of a lease a landlord need only give 2 weeks notice that one must exit
the property, which is all fine except when there are no other
properties for rent. Even the property we are in we were extremely
fortunate in that the land agent knew it was coming onto the market and
let us apply before it had, and promised us not to submit or accept
applications from anybody else unless we were rejected, so our landlord
only got to see our application and accepted it. But we had frantically
been trying to rent anywhere given the 2 weeks notice and were faced
with what so many are, 10s, 20s or 30s of applicants for every property
we applied for and as I had just become unemployed at the time our
prospects of finding a property seemed very bleak, even the property we
got, had the landagent not taken pity on us we would never have got it
if we had been up against most other renters e.g. 2 Accountants, or 2
nurses or 2 anything else. (Needless to say we bought him a bottle of
very nice red!!). This is why even though we have separated fortunately
we still get on well enough to live together (in separate rooms now
though) and treat the household as any unrelated flatmates would. I
am unsure if you saw insight last night, but the situation is dire out
there and the fact that Australia has Hundreds of thousands of people
who are homeless, as well as the fact that the very poorest are
extorted in boarding houses, caravan parks etc...... for an example
given last night at a caravan park for a crappy little 1 room bungalow
(and not bungalow like you imagine in Fiji, but bungalow like you think
of a expanded and converted outdoor dunny) and they have to pay $250
per week simply because that is the bottom of the market not based on
any concept of value for money - I mean if they paid double the money
$500 they could probably rent a property incomparably better given the
one they were in was so shocking but for $500 I am sure they could get
a multi bedroom house with nice bathroom, good kitchen, multiple
bedrooms so all the kids and parents don't sleep in the one room is I
am sure you agree repugnant. I also know a few people who lived in a
boarding house on Merthyr Road that has just been sold (if you are
familiar with your electorate I am sure you know the property), the new
owner kicked everybody out, and put up all the rents as far as I know -
the rents were already $150 for a tiny little room - how is even a
single person on the dole meant to survive when this is the cheapest accommodation out there and it leaves them less than $100 a week for
food and bills and transport etc....... even a concession public
transport ticket is 1% of their weekly income or about 2.8% of their
remaining $100. Whereas we pay about 2.5 times what they pay and have a
beautiful apartment. So it is simply a matter of the poor being totally
extorted, the reality is in terms of percentage of income or value for
money the poor rather than paying the least percentage of income or
getting the best value for money pay the highest and get the least
living in such deplorable conditions and are totally at the mercy of
predatory landlords who care nothing for the welfare or standard of
living of their tenants or providing them with accommodation remotely
justifiable to the price. Here
we go, my last paragraph - the housing minister on insight last night
probably came across well to the average intelligence Australian, but
if you had half a brain and listened to her the poor people in these
circumstances of limited intelligence or education probably saw her as
a white knight, rather than spitting her for what she said. Look at all
the great Engineering Projects that happen in the world in phenomenal
time frames (I know I've been involved with some of them in Australia)
this whole "it took a long time to create, it will take a long time to
fix is bullshit". I am sure if Kevin Rudd went to the Australian people
and said we have a crisis in this country 250,000 to 300,000 people
live on the streets every night in this country and most low income
earners are paying over 50% of their income to live in third world
conditions I am going to take $5 Billion dollars from the proposed tax
cuts and fix this problem. Not by building low income ghettos, but by
rapidly and sensibly creating a stock of quality low rent properties (I mean you are going to give the $5 billion in tax cuts, so the returns
on the properties shouldn't be a major concern) to create an Australia
where we know more people are going to have a roof over their head not
less (which is the way it is leaning) and which would also force other
low income accommodation providers to clean up their act or go out of
business - he would be applauded by the Australian People not regarded
negatively for reducing the (stupid tax cuts that the Liberals forced
you into) by $5 billion for such a worthy cause. These home saver
accounts etc....... aren't going to do anything for people who have
nothing left to save, and nothing to prevent the number of homeless
increasing - you need to increase supply to fix these problems!! And $5
billion in the first year would be a good start - admittedly tradesmen
would be difficult to get hold of - but compared to the poor conditions
construction workers get in Arab countries I am sure they would
willingly come here on temporary working Visas if we treated this as
another Snowy Hydro type endeavor to make Australia a fairer place and
reduce poverty (except of course unlike the snowy workers these ones
would have to go back, but at $35 to $40 per hour for carpenters and
plumbers I am sure they would come, we would just have to plan this
like a major project e.g. accommodation logistics etc......... $31
Billion in tax cuts as a core promise - if you don't want to break it,
put it to a referendum - I am sure you would find where Australian
Hearts really lie - that is why I couldn't stomach the Howard
Government no longer when workchoices bad enough when the economy was
good, but if economic conditions changed and unemployment rose would
have been used ruthlessly by employers to the detriment of practically
everyone, except the very few still in a strong bargaining position -
and voted Labour, but I believe the problem was Howard not the Party so
much, (for instance unlike practically everyone else I liked Costello
and do believe he had a strong social conscience, but was forced to toe
the Howard line and did so faithfully - a flaw in his character I
believe. Hockey just lied and lied and lied, but once again I believe
he had no choice due to Howard. But anyway now you are in government
and it is up to you to bring the humanity back and how you can do that
is by ditching in part if not in full the $31 Billion in tax cuts
Howard cornered you into promises - and as long as you use that money
wisely when the opposition comes at you about core and non-core promises
you can come back at them from the high moral ground and say are you
prepared to go around all these families that were living in cars and
third world accommodation and kick them out of their houses to live on
the streets or the way they were - if not then SHUTUP!!! If you can
find equally worthy things to do with the rest of the $31 Billion do
that too - send a study to Holland to look at how they treat and look
after their elderly and then compare it to here - that would be another
worthy cause that a portion of $31 Billion (which is a huge amount of
money!!) and if the opposition comes at you ask them who would want
their mother/grandmother to be treated the way it used to be before you
implemented these changes. AS LONG AS YOU SPEND THE MONEY WISELY AND
WITH A HUMANITARIAN HEART THE ELECTORATE WILL NOT HOLD IT AGAINST YOU
THEY WILL ADMIRE YOU FOR BREAKING THIS PROMISE - EVERYONE KNOWS THIS IS
NOT A PROMISE KEVIN RUDD WOULD HAVE MADE WILLINGLY AND IF YOU HONOUR IT
IT WILL SHOW THE LABOUR PARTY STILL DANCES TO HOWARDS TUNE - WE WERE
SICK OF HOWARD BECAUSE ALTHOUGH TIMES HAD BEEN PROSPEROUS UNDER HIM WE
KNEW THE COUNTRY WAS PAYING A PRICE WITH ITS SOUL FOR HAVING HIM IN THE
TOP JOB - AS LONG AS YOU SHOW THE HUMANITARIAN SOUL WE HAVE ALL MISSED
FOR THE PAST 10 YEARS BUT RELUCTANTLY HAD TO VOTE FOR ANYWAY (I mean up
till now Labour was a disaster and Beasley would have fucked the
economy faster than the spread of myxamytosis through a rabbit colony). Anyway I apologise for it being so long, I hope you either reply with what is wrong with my ideas or some feedback that demonstrates it actually has been read. And if you take up the idea on using super to reduce Mortgage Insurance can you please name it the "Carl Louwrens" Bill so everyone knows who to thank - ha ha....... TrackbacksThe trackback URL for this entry is: http://insidecarlscranium.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!B07200268CDF4A5!120.trak Weblogs that reference this entry
|
|
|