It was great to read about a new homeowner in Saturday's Rotorua Daily Post. It's never been easy to go without and save enough for a deposit, so it's always encouraging to hear of young people managing to get their foot on the ladder.
However, as has been consistent with stories about younger people who have managed to buy a home, is they all required assistance from their parents to get on the ladder, in this case, in the form of his parents guaranteeing the mortgage.
Based on these stories and anecdotal evidence, it seems the key requirement in a younger person buying a home has less to do with the person's finances, and more to do with their parents financial situation. If that doesn't sound like the best fuel for intergenerational inequality, then I don't know what does.
Home ownership rates are at the lowest level in 66 years, if this statistic continues to fall, there will be more people missing out on the social and financial benefits which come from home ownership.
In my view, this is an indictment on government policy, which currently treats houses as just another commodity to be bought and sold for profit, instead of somewhere to raise your family.
They do this by encouraging property speculation via tax breaks and by creating additional demand without ensuring supply, further pushing prices up and up.
A person buying a home should never be newsworthy, but the mere fact that it is shows how much of a crisis we're in.
RYAN GRAY
Hamurana
Less whinging and more right decisions
I have to congratulate Scott Semmens on his decisions. I also think they are common sense decisions really, in which many of our young and not so young people have not got.
Home ownership is not a God given right, it takes a lot of hard work and sacrifice.
So to all you want-to-be home owners stop whinging about how hard it is and start making the right decisions.
GAVIN MUIR
Rotorua