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Pues aquí una perla para el principal, el fin del trabajo, el invierno demográfico, y el copón bendito.https://twitter.com/kenklippenstein/status/1701658625280704599CitarProperty developer and CEO Tim Gurner: "We need to see unemployment rise. Unemployment has to jump 40, 50 percent in my view. We need to see pain in the economy. We need to remind people that they work for the employer, not the other way around."Tim Gurner, promotor inmobiliario y CEO: "Necesitamos que aumente el desempleo. En mi opinión, el desempleo tiene que subir un 40%, un 50%. Tenemos que ver dolor en la economía. Tenemos que recordar a la gente que trabaja para el empresario, no al revés".Más allá del asco que puede dar leer esto, uno lo piensa en frío y hasta se ríe. ¿Cómo piensas cumplir esa amenaza, corazón? Tenemos el reciente caso de Grindr, y también el sonado de Twitter. Musk dando a elegir tres meses de salario para el que no quisiera quedarse a trabajar como un cabrón pensando que el personal tragaría, y no tragó.Si no se hubiese puteado tanto al personal, con el precio de la vivienda como esterilizador final y supremo, ahora los "empresaurios" no tendrían estos problemillas.Es hasta de agradecer que estos sociópatas se quiten la careta y revelen de qué tienen miedo.
Property developer and CEO Tim Gurner: "We need to see unemployment rise. Unemployment has to jump 40, 50 percent in my view. We need to see pain in the economy. We need to remind people that they work for the employer, not the other way around."Tim Gurner, promotor inmobiliario y CEO: "Necesitamos que aumente el desempleo. En mi opinión, el desempleo tiene que subir un 40%, un 50%. Tenemos que ver dolor en la economía. Tenemos que recordar a la gente que trabaja para el empresario, no al revés".
"Necesitamos que disminuyan los precios. En mi opinión, el impuesto a los promotores tiene que subir un 40%, un 50%. Tenemos que ver dolor en su economía. Tenemos que recordarles que la sociedad, el Estado, les permite operar, y no al revés".
https://www.eleconomista.es/actualidad/noticias/12441555/09/23/la-generalitat-obligara-a-los-propietarios-a-alquilar-los-campos-y-pastos-abandonados.htmlSaludos.
Hay una campaña en los autobuses de Madrid que ensalza correr descalzo... y aclara en un aparte "tranquilizador": No es la opción mayoritaria, aún.Vale todo, ni el más mínimo respeto por los demás. (Los demás que no son ricos... aún. )
https://www.lavanguardia.com/vida/20230913/9222677/espana-lidera-ue-abandono-escolar-pese-pais-mas-horas-lectivas.htmlEspaña lidera la UE en abandono escolar pese a ser el país con más horas lectivasActualmente la tasa de abandono se sitúa en el 13,9% (entre 18 y 25 años), aunque los jóvenes de 25 a 34 años que solo tienen estudios básicos son el 26, 5% de la población.
Esta le va a gustar a Manu:Citarhttps://www.lavanguardia.com/vida/20230913/9222677/espana-lidera-ue-abandono-escolar-pese-pais-mas-horas-lectivas.htmlEspaña lidera la UE en abandono escolar pese a ser el país con más horas lectivasActualmente la tasa de abandono se sitúa en el 13,9% (entre 18 y 25 años), aunque los jóvenes de 25 a 34 años que solo tienen estudios básicos son el 26, 5% de la población.(para qué voy a estudiar, si mi papá me dice que los ingenieros solo sirven para que un casero zampalangostinos viva de ellos, y que con el pisito que voy a heredar cuando se muera, me quedare con el 50% del sueldo de los listillos esos que pierden el tiempo estudiando)Ojo al dato: el 26, 5% de los "jovenes' de 25 a 34 años solo tienen estudios basicos.Telita, telita....
https://www.cityam.com/london-rent-crisis-spirals-as-almost-half-of-uk-landlords-tried-to-sell-up-in-last-year/CitarLondon rent crisis spirals as almost half of UK landlords tried to sell up in last yearAlmost half of UK landlords have tried to sell their property in the last 12 months, as owners look to rid themselves of mortgage pressures in a worrying blow for renters.In a survey which quizzed both landlords and estate agents – conducted by lettings platform Goodlord – some 77.5 per cent of respondents in London alone cited rising mortgage rates as a reason for homeowners trying to exit the market. A further 98 per cent of estate agents in London reported that at least one of their landlords was selling a property. As a whole across the UK, 47 per cent of the landlords have tried to shift their property in the last 12 months. The ecosystem of the UK’s housing market has been battered in the last year – first by the fall out of last September’s mini budget and then by the central bank’s 14 straight interest rate hikes which sent borrowing costs into a frenzy. Despite mortgage rates cooling from their summer peak, landlords appear to still be bruised from the fall out, as 80 per cent of agents warned that they expected more landlords to reduce their property portfolio in the next 12 months. The figures will spell misery for the UK’s 4.6 million private tenants who have seen the renting pool shrink over the last year. Some 73 per cent of renters said that finding a property to rent was “one of the most stressful things they have ever done.” The dwindling supply has also allowed landlords to ramp up the asking monthly renting price on their properties – 13 per cent of tenants this year said that they paid more rent per month than the rate originally advertised. “When tenant contracts come to an end, they now look around the marketplace and realise that there’s little point moving to another property, as it’s likely to cost them another hundred pounds or more per month,” Mark Gray, director at Elevation Lettings. “That in itself has contributed to much lower numbers of fluidity of movement and availability across all the property portals.”“London has always experienced high demand from tenants which has been met as much as possible by private as well as corporate landlords,” Richard Davies, chief operating officer of Chestertons, said.“With major changes such as the Renters Reform Bill being introduced as well as rising interest rates generating less profit for overleveraged landlords in particular, the market has seen some deciding to sell up.He added: “At the same time, however, we are liaising with homeowners; not landlords; who delay their sale due to the weaker sales market and put their property on the rental market instead.”
London rent crisis spirals as almost half of UK landlords tried to sell up in last yearAlmost half of UK landlords have tried to sell their property in the last 12 months, as owners look to rid themselves of mortgage pressures in a worrying blow for renters.In a survey which quizzed both landlords and estate agents – conducted by lettings platform Goodlord – some 77.5 per cent of respondents in London alone cited rising mortgage rates as a reason for homeowners trying to exit the market. A further 98 per cent of estate agents in London reported that at least one of their landlords was selling a property. As a whole across the UK, 47 per cent of the landlords have tried to shift their property in the last 12 months. The ecosystem of the UK’s housing market has been battered in the last year – first by the fall out of last September’s mini budget and then by the central bank’s 14 straight interest rate hikes which sent borrowing costs into a frenzy. Despite mortgage rates cooling from their summer peak, landlords appear to still be bruised from the fall out, as 80 per cent of agents warned that they expected more landlords to reduce their property portfolio in the next 12 months. The figures will spell misery for the UK’s 4.6 million private tenants who have seen the renting pool shrink over the last year. Some 73 per cent of renters said that finding a property to rent was “one of the most stressful things they have ever done.” The dwindling supply has also allowed landlords to ramp up the asking monthly renting price on their properties – 13 per cent of tenants this year said that they paid more rent per month than the rate originally advertised. “When tenant contracts come to an end, they now look around the marketplace and realise that there’s little point moving to another property, as it’s likely to cost them another hundred pounds or more per month,” Mark Gray, director at Elevation Lettings. “That in itself has contributed to much lower numbers of fluidity of movement and availability across all the property portals.”“London has always experienced high demand from tenants which has been met as much as possible by private as well as corporate landlords,” Richard Davies, chief operating officer of Chestertons, said.“With major changes such as the Renters Reform Bill being introduced as well as rising interest rates generating less profit for overleveraged landlords in particular, the market has seen some deciding to sell up.He added: “At the same time, however, we are liaising with homeowners; not landlords; who delay their sale due to the weaker sales market and put their property on the rental market instead.”
https://www.eleconomista.es/energia/noticias/12441677/09/23/china-pone-en-jaque-a-la-industria-fotovoltaica-que-reclama-un-rescate-urgente-a-europa.htmlSaludos.