14.5% of household mortgages are in arrears in Ireland as of today. I can't find the historical norm at the moment but 1 in every 7 houses being in arrears (after all the repossessions of the past few years) sounds awful high.vtsnowedin wrote: Not that I disagree with your point but "thousands in arrears" doesn't tell me much. What is the historic norm for the percentage of mortgages that go bad and how does the current rate compare?
We also have to remember all the people whose majority of household income is going towards ridiculous debts (but fortunately are not in arrears). A friend of mine pays - and has being paying for ten years now - a mortgage of €1,700 per month. All the people in his estate will be paying roughly the same, it was a new estate when he bought the house. That's not far off our personal income in total. There must be hundreds of thousands handing over such sums to banks.
This is not just 'negative equity'. This is criminal profiteering as you end up paying double the asking price over the course of a mortgage.
During the so-called 'good times', the price of property became risible but banks gave 100% - and sometimes more - mortgages. These properties are simply not worth such sums. The cost of materials barely rose, yet a house costing no more than €50,000 in materials would be priced almost a third of a million.
Today some people are able to buy the same properties for what they're actually worth: €80,000. Their high-mortgage neighbours must be seething at being had like this. What an imbecilic system. Some people will thus end up paying €700,000 for an €80,000 property.