Do Romanians really hate rented housing that much?
Quesabirria on
My friends outside of Munich own their home, but have to a kind of rent payment to their local Catholic church. The own the home but maybe now the land
Significant-Ring9934 on
Moved from Belgium to Germany. 90% of my Belgian friends bought their own house by 30yo, absolutely none of my German friends does.
Obnomus on
Where Iceland?
HimikoHime on
Believe it or not, some Germans rent out of convenience because renter rights are strong. And because buying is so expensive it’s seen as a once in a lifetime thing. Unless you are 200% sure you’ll never move again, you don’t buy.
poniesonthehop on
David Ramsey hates Europe
Confident_Reporter14 on
The crazy thing about Ireland is this figure was at about 20% only 20 years ago, with half of those being social.
This growth has been almost exclusively via foreign corporate landlords who were invited here by our government. Ireland has now become a renters society, but without any of the protections you’ll find in mainland Europe, with almost all of the revenues leaving our shores and with only a small few actors having the power to set market prices.
Welcome to renters hell.
Signal_Twenty on
Interesting. Another recent image from mapporn shows unemployment rates in Europe, and it’s almost like there’s a (inverse?) correlation between housing and unemployment.
CosmicGaymer on
Kind of a weird decision weird to put in Switzerland’s data despite it not being in the EU but then ignore it for the „highest“ stat by keeping that one EU only.
Ex iron curtain countries have low birth rate + high emigration so all the Cold War housing is passed on from grandparents.
In Bulgaria in particular property taxes are so low that people would rather lock their apartment than sell/bother renting. Curious what will happen when all the project panel buildings from the 40s-60s start being uninhabitable
CampaignHot3534 on
Jesus loves you all and he will be with you to supporting and having a relationship with you
SignatureLabel on
Ireland would be higher. You should try find the percentage of 30+yo living in their parents spare bedroom for accuracy.
RightingArm on
Europeans all live with their moms.
simonsaysitsometimes on
apartments in Hungary were collectivized during socialism.
prior to that 90+% of the residents of Budapest were renting.
in the early 90s theese collectivized apartments and the commieblocks that were built in the era were given to the residents that rented them for trinket amounts.
that is the sole reason why homeownership is this high.
although I belive its not as high as the map suggests, many people rent unofficially.
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Rent life, the European dream.
Now subtract people living with their parents.
Do Romanians really hate rented housing that much?
My friends outside of Munich own their home, but have to a kind of rent payment to their local Catholic church. The own the home but maybe now the land
Moved from Belgium to Germany. 90% of my Belgian friends bought their own house by 30yo, absolutely none of my German friends does.
Where Iceland?
Believe it or not, some Germans rent out of convenience because renter rights are strong. And because buying is so expensive it’s seen as a once in a lifetime thing. Unless you are 200% sure you’ll never move again, you don’t buy.
David Ramsey hates Europe
The crazy thing about Ireland is this figure was at about 20% only 20 years ago, with half of those being social.
This growth has been almost exclusively via foreign corporate landlords who were invited here by our government. Ireland has now become a renters society, but without any of the protections you’ll find in mainland Europe, with almost all of the revenues leaving our shores and with only a small few actors having the power to set market prices.
Welcome to renters hell.
Interesting. Another recent image from mapporn shows unemployment rates in Europe, and it’s almost like there’s a (inverse?) correlation between housing and unemployment.
Kind of a weird decision weird to put in Switzerland’s data despite it not being in the EU but then ignore it for the „highest“ stat by keeping that one EU only.
This is incorrect for The Netherlands, should be 42.8% (in 2023). Source: [https://opendata.cbs.nl/#/CBS/nl/dataset/82900NED/table?dl=10740](https://opendata.cbs.nl/#/CBS/nl/dataset/82900NED/table?dl=10740)
Ex iron curtain countries have low birth rate + high emigration so all the Cold War housing is passed on from grandparents.
In Bulgaria in particular property taxes are so low that people would rather lock their apartment than sell/bother renting. Curious what will happen when all the project panel buildings from the 40s-60s start being uninhabitable
Jesus loves you all and he will be with you to supporting and having a relationship with you
Ireland would be higher. You should try find the percentage of 30+yo living in their parents spare bedroom for accuracy.
Europeans all live with their moms.
apartments in Hungary were collectivized during socialism.
prior to that 90+% of the residents of Budapest were renting.
in the early 90s theese collectivized apartments and the commieblocks that were built in the era were given to the residents that rented them for trinket amounts.
that is the sole reason why homeownership is this high.
although I belive its not as high as the map suggests, many people rent unofficially.