Buyers Strike Special on air

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Renegade Economists radio

As broadcast on 3CR, Wednesday March 23rd.

Prosper campaigner David Collyer was our featured guest this week as we dissect the energy behind week 1 of the rampaging Home Buyer’s Strike. We have now flown up the GetUp forum’s charts to number 8 with over 1865 votes in 10 days. This is encouraging!

A passionate show about why we should be doing all we can to stop our friends from buying into this over-priced market.

Listen

References:
Popping-bubble.blogspot
RP Data on dwelling commencements

Don’t Buy Now Campaign launched

Karl FitzgeraldCommentary3 Comments

Home Buyers Strike Called

The Dont Buy Now Home Buyers Strike was launched Tuesday to warn prospective property buyers that now is the worst time to buy a house.

The state of the housing market is unfurling at a rate of knots. A mexican standoff is being played out between sellers trying to maintain prices and buyers being hounded to jump into the market. Abnormally high auction listings raise questions about our supposed housing supply shortage.

Usually Melbourne averages around 700 properties for auction per weekend. The next 3 weeks will see 900 properties listed per weekend, on top of the 1000 plus type listings in December (of all months!).

Check unexpected jump in mortgage arrears, the suburban divide and here comes the crash.

Tuesday’s ABS housing lending figures were also of note.

RP-Data tweeted Mar 15 “Capital gains recorded in all capital cities in past 12 months, except Sydney, have been below avg annual growth in values over last decade.”

The spruikers are exiting the market and will be doing all they can to cover their trails.

With this in mind we have triggered a Home Buyers Strike awareness raising campaign.

GetUp supporter Bullion Baron has picked up on Prosper Australia’s press release Prosper Calls for Buyers Strike and listed it on the GetUp campaign ideas forum. (FYI Prosper is Earthsharing’s parent body). Here is the latest press release @Prosper : Buyers Strike Day 3.

At present we are racing up the GetUp charts from 111th Tuesday night to 19th a few minutes ago. A campaign on GetUp could be just the kickstart we need to bring people into the bigger issue of re-balancing the tax game away from speculative largess and towards housing as a human right.

We need 300 more people to vote a ‘3’ (just 900 votes) to be the number one GetUp campaign idea.

Vote for our Buyers Strike on GetUp – it takes barely 20 seconds.

Forward on the link: http://tinyurl.com/buyerstrike

Join the facebook group

– the most recent comment there was “At last…the voice of the people instead of the spruikers!”

Remember:
In Jan 2011 the average first home buyers loan was a staggering $266,700. In April 2000 (just as John Howard’s halving of Capital Gains Tax was kicking in) the average size of a loan was $134,000. The halving of CGT for a select few has in effect doubled the costs for the rest of us.

Now’s the time to act. Warn your friends!

Introducing …. Earthsharing Canada

Karl FitzgeraldTrue Cost EconomicsLeave a Comment

Our good friend Frank de Jong has set up Earthsharing Canada. Check the new look website where you can read Frank’s erudite writings like:

Untax Business, Uptax Nature
By Frank de Jong

Well, the federal political parties are saber rattling again, threatening an election over the corporate tax cuts which will be in the upcoming budget.

The Conservatives are sticking with their plan to roll back corporate taxes from 22% in 2007 to 15%, that corporate tax cuts are good for the economy…, while the Liberals say this is a bad idea in the face of a $56 billion deficit. The NDP are of course lined up behind the Libs.

Both sides are half right and half wrong, giving the Green Party an excellent opportunity to promote our economic program.

Harper is correct, corporate taxes are bad for the economy. Taxes on productive activities are “dead weight” taxes which make some marginal productive activities uneconomical that otherwise would be viable, creating jobs.

But the Libs and NDP are also right, that the gov should not run a deficit, should not mortgage our future, nor should it cut programs that hurt people, especially the vulnerable, and lower the quality of life.

Green economic theory agrees that governments should untax businesses to encourage economic activity, jobs, providing goods and services. There should be no taxes at all on businesses. We want businesses to be successful so why would we punish them with taxes??

But green economics is socially progressive and fiscally responsible, so clearly governments should not run deficits and governments need revenue to provide the programs we need and want.

What to do?

The Green Party solution is to untax people and businesses and instead generate needed revenue by collecting fees and levies on the use and abuse of nature. This approach will right-price nature, preserving it, and at the same time encourage businesses to be more resource efficient (conservation) and labour intensive (more jobs).

If the next federal election is fought over corporate tax cuts, we will have an excellent angle, a very strong platform.

Our slogans can be: Pay for what you burn, not for what you earn. Pay for what you take, not for what you make. The government should collect unearned income, not earned income. Government shouldn’t punish someone for having a job or punish a business for being successful!

By untaxing jobs and business and instead collecting “economic rent” (revenue without a corresponding cost of production), government would be putting renewables on a level playing field with fossil fuels, would make walkable communities attractive compared to sprawl, and bias organic, local agriculture over industrial/factory farming.
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Earth Based Economics

Karl FitzgeraldCommentary, True Cost EconomicsLeave a Comment

“When capitalism started, nature was abundant and capital was scarce; it thus made sense to reward capital above all else. Today we’re awash in capital and literally running out of nature”, Peter Barnes, Capitalism 3.0

“A commons arises whenever a given community decides that it wishes to manage a resource in a collective manner, with special regard for equitable access, use and sustainability. It is a social form that has long lived in the shadows of our market culture, and now is on the rise.”, David Bollier, www.onthecommons.org
.

“Sacrifice of nature’s scarce services constitutes an increasing opportunity cost of growth, and that in turn means that nature must be priced, either explicitly or implicitly. But to whom should this price be paid?”, Herman Daly

These 3 quotes were part of a document we prepared for the Sustainable Living Festival. Download the double sided A4 paper Earth Based Economics and share it around.