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¿Qué opción hay, CHOSEN?
Entre los problemas que no nos dejan dormir está el 'insomnio inmobiliario', ¿atajarlo sería una solución?Si pensamos en los remedios para dormir mejor, tenemos las recomendaciones habituales que a veces valen por un tiempo. Pero si pensamos en remedios de verdad, si asumimos que es un problema social, deberíamos ir a las causas de ese malestar que nos impide dormir. Y aunque no es el único, entre ellos está ahora la vivienda. Tenemos una crisis de vivienda enorme en España que seguramente le quita el sueño a mucha gente.No quiere decir que resolviendo el tema de la vivienda vayamos a dormir mejor porque habrá gente que seguirá durmiendo mal por otros motivos, pero si hubiera una política pública de vivienda ambiciosa y que resolviera la crisis que tenemos, seguramente habría gente que dormiría mejor.¿Cree que se le dará solución?El problema es que mientras no llega la solución, cada vez estamos en peor situación. Si se consiguiera simplemente parar la subida, ya sería un éxito. Pero ya no nos vale con que no siga subiendo, necesitamos que baje. La desproporción de cómo en los últimos años sube la vivienda a cómo lo hacen los sueldos, hace que el hueco entre el poder adquisitivo de la gente y la vivienda sea enorme.Y no es un problema como a veces se dice solo de los jóvenes que se tienen que emancipar, es un problema de familias, de gente de todas las edades, gente que de repente cambia de trabajo, de ciudad, se separa y tiene que buscar un piso y no puede. Ya no estamos en una crisis de vivienda, estamos en una emergencia de vivienda. Igual que pasó con el cambio climático.
Que España sea el país en el que más se consumen benzodiacepinas en el mundo demuestra lo normalizado que lo tenemos.Es que este dato me impresionó, es un disparate. Estamos tomando ansiolíticos y eso dice mucho de nuestros malestares sociales, pero también del sistema sanitario que receta con tanta facilidad porque no tiene otro recurso. Si tú no puedes dormir y vas al médico, pero este no tiene tiempo para atenderte o recursos a los que derivarte, al final lo fácil es darte una pastilla.
Entre 2018 y 2022: caída de preciosEntre 2022 y 2025: la vivienda deja de ser inversión.A partir del 2025: Era Cero (vivienda obrera casi gratis)
Estaba por aquí, ordenando apuntes:CitarEntre 2018 y 2022: caída de preciosEntre 2022 y 2025: la vivienda deja de ser inversión.A partir del 2025: Era Cero (vivienda obrera casi gratis)
Cita de: breades en Ayer a las 20:12:24¿Qué opción hay, CHOSEN?El PSOE está esperando a que la generación-boomer muera y el artefacto muera con ellos. Es una cobardía.Y las cobardías se pagan.
Cita de: CHOSEN en Hoy a las 09:44:20Cita de: breades en Ayer a las 20:12:24¿Qué opción hay, CHOSEN?El PSOE está esperando a que la generación-boomer muera y el artefacto muera con ellos. Es una cobardía.Y las cobardías se pagan.Eso es un error. La generación actual de los que van de los 30-55 años es tan pisitófila o más, como lo fueron sus padres. Los boomers lo empezaron, pero los que vienen detrás lo están llevando a cotas que serán estudiadas en los libros del futuro. La generación actual de los que van de los 30-55 años son el núcleo duro de las Clases Medias Extractivas. Los que han metido todo su dinero en El Pisito, y tambien lo que se están hipotecando para especular. No van a permitir, bajo ningún concepto, que ninguna "política" les arrebate sus ingresos inmobiliarios, que para los herederos ya empiezan a ser mayores que sus rentas salariales.
La crisis inmobiliaria española de 2022–2025 es una crisis habitacional de carácter estructural que afecta al mercado de la vivienda, marcada por el encarecimiento sostenido de los precios de compraventa y alquiler, un acusado déficit de oferta residencial y crecientes barreras de acceso a una vivienda digna.https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crisis_inmobiliaria_espa%C3%B1ola_de_2022-2025
Cita de: breades en Ayer a las 20:12:24¿Qué opción hay, CHOSEN?Mi favorita sin duda es subir los impuestos al artefacto (especialmente al vacío), esa es la especialidad de los socialistas-de-hizquierda. Pero antes se los subirán al pan.Tenemos normativa para regular el color de las persianas pero no se hace nada respecto a soportales vacíos llenos de basura en las calles principales. En cualquier centro de ciudad hay edificios enteros vacíos llenos de grafittis. No entiendo como una sociedad ordenada permite eso. Una simple normativa sobre estética local, como la que ya existe para las terrazas y sombrillas, solucionaría el problema.Yo no contaría con la solución política. Todo alrededor del artefacto A-P-E-S-T-A.El PSOE no está subiendo impuestos a eso que llena portadas con subidas BIDIGITALES desde hace 20 años.A quien se lo cuentes, NO SE LO CREE.Y da que pensar. Por eso me resulta chocante que la solución propuesta por el maestro sea centralizar y resocializar (politizar) los servicios de vivienda, tras más de 15 años de SAREB, y los que quedan.Las leyes objetivas de la historia suenan demasiado a la mano invisible del mercado.El PSOE está esperando a que la generación-boomer muera y el artefacto muera con ellos. Es una cobardía.Y las cobardías se pagan.
'The English don't come any more...we miss their money': How Mallorca's war on British tourists backfired6 September 2025It was once the go-to destination for coming-of-age Brits looking for their first taste of sun and sangria.But today, Magaluf faces an unprecedented crisis after being practically abandoned by UK holidaymakers.That's according to a string of bar owners at the Mallorca resort, who told the Daily Mail this week how they have suffered year-on-year losses of up to 40 per cent this summer.They claim a perfect storm of anti-partying laws, hotel price hikes and anti-tourism protests are pushing the vital British market to mainland rivals like Benidorm.In its heyday, Magaluf epitomised the typical 'lads holiday' or girls' trip abroad, with tens of thousands of British 18 to 30-year-olds flocking to the resort each summer during the late 2000s and 2010s.Now, with Brits dropping off, businesses fear they will be forced to rely on 'penny-pinching' Europeans who simply 'do not spend the same', wreaking havoc on their profits.One party rep said he was stunned after seeing a group of four Italians sharing one tequila shot between them, while a bar manager insisted the French 'don't spend a cent'.Meanwhile, workers accused Calvia Town Hall (the local authority), of working with the 'powerful hotel lobby' to orchestrate the demise of bars on the party strip (Punta ballena).This, they claim, is part of their attempt to rebrand Magaluf as the family-friendly 'Calvia Beach Resort'.Manuel Pozueco, 42, manages the iconic British bar Linekers, which also has locations in Ibiza and Marbella.He told the Daily Mail: 'The hotels are connected to the politicians and their plan is to destroy the businesses outside the hotels.'Under the recent laws, we can't do happy hours or give away free shots, we can't do any drink deals, as they see it as promoting excessive alcohol consumption, and of course this turns away traditional customers like the Brits.'A big issue of contention is the so-called 'Red Zone', an area of land demarcated by the town hall in 2020 in a bid to crack down on 'excessive tourism'.Businesses in the red zone have stricter rules that they must follow, or face being heavily fined or shut down.These include a ban on pub crawls, drink deals, happy hours and organised party boats, as well as noise restrictions.But while before it covered a large part of Magaluf, last June it was reduced by 90 per cent and now only affects the strip and a few adjoining streets - and crucially, almost no hotels.Calvia Town Hall, run by the conservative Partido Popular and hard-right Vox parties, branded it a 'responsible tourism and quality improvement' measure.But for the bar owners on the ground, it felt discriminatory.Workers have accused Calvia Town Hall (the local authority), of working with the 'powerful hotel lobby' to orchestrate the demise of bars on the party strip.Jason Brown, 44, (pictured) who runs Tom Brown's on the frontline of Magaluf, has witnessed decades of changes, as his restaurant was first bought by his father in 1981A big issue of contention is the so-called 'Red Zone', an area of land demarcated by the town hall in a bid to crack down on 'excessive tourism' (Pictured: A general view of Magaluf) Manuel said hotels have open bars until midnight, with 'hundreds of guests queuing' to get liquored up.'If we are caught serving drunk people we can be fined thousands, but the new laws only apply to small businesses,' he fumed.'We pretty much cannot have music either, a speaker from the supermarket is louder than what we're allowed in here. Who wants to go to a bar where you can hardly hear the music? The same goes for watching a football match.'Manuel showed the Daily Mail a special device he has attached to the DJ booth which monitors the noise level.In the evenings, according to the Calvia town hall and Spanish Law 37/2003, night time venues cannot exceed 35 decibels on the street.During the day, Manuel says, the limit rises to around 60 or 70 - equivalent to a vacuum cleaner.He added: 'I have friends in the town hall who have actually told me they don't want the bars anymore, they want coffee shops and clothes stores. They want to destroy the Magaluf we've known for decades.'And now look, there are no British tourists this year, everyone is going to Benidorm or Torrevieja.'Manuel accused the Mallorca authorities of 'demonising' British tourists, using a string of 'balconing' deaths pre-pandemic - at hotels - as an 'excuse' to crack down on the party strip.'What they have done to the British tourists is insulting,' he said, 'We've always been here for the Brits… the Italians, French and Polish, they don't spend a penny in the bars, we are 30-40 per cent down on last year.'Phoebe Malena, 21, from Mallorca, works at Boat Excursions on the front line. She said she had seen more families coming In 2020, drinking was banned on public streets in Magaluf, with fines of up to €3,000 for rule-breakersThe lack of Brits this year is no coincidence, coming just months after the Balearic Islands government published a 350-page 'Sustainability Pact' document.In it, they revealed their plan to 'reduce dependence on traditional markets' like the UK and Germany.In 2020, they also banned drinking on public streets in Magaluf, with fines of up to €3,000 for rule-breakers.A sign on the party strip this week warns revellers: 'Shout, fight or bother people, €400 penalty.'Gabi Carbonell, 52, owns four businesses along Magaluf's strip, including the Stereo nightclub.He agreed that it is 'undeniable' that the drop in Brits has been 'extreme', adding that the authorities' plan of attracting wealthy golfers is not working.Gabi told the Daily Mail: 'There is pressure from the hotels, town hall and protests etc to have 'higher quality' tourists, they want to change the area but we didn't expect such a rapid and extreme change.'This used to be a kind of initiation resort for teenage Brits, but now it's too expensive and the stricter laws are hurting bars.'This week used to have lots of hen and stag dos but now they go to Benidorm, where there are fewer rules and it is cheaper - it's like the authorities want to make us boring'During the day the strip is now a ghost town, nothing really opens until 8pm, but the hotels will be full.'It's a far cry from resorts like Benidorm, where Brits can still be seen getting the pints in from 10am and drinking throughout the day.'If it continues like this all the bars will disappear in two or three years, I've already had to let go of 30 staff,' Gabi warned.Businesses in the red zone have stricter rules that they must follow, or face being heavily fined or shut down. Pictured: A general view of Magaluf He added: 'I think we all need to meet and decide what type of resort we are. There's a market for everyone, but the golfers are not coming, because it's twice the price of Alicante, and we don't have that many family friendly hotels yet.'But there are already clear signs that the strip has changed. While there are still the tacky shops selling explicit t-shirts and trinkets, a worker in one of the stores said they were 'shocked' by the number of families this year.There are also now two silent discos, suggesting businesses are attempting to appease the town hall's noise regulations - while a 'Healthy Options' cafe offers a host of vitamin-packed smoothies, hinting at the resort's family-orientated future (and perhaps at the fact that Gen Z don't party like the millennials once did).Sulamita Salazar, 24, works at a tattoo shop on the strip, which has been operating for 15 years.She told the Daily Mail: 'I haven't tattooed any Brits this year and they were the ones who spent the most, this has been the worst year for us since before the pandemic.'Of course when there is a crackdown on drinking there are fewer people coming and looking for tattoos.'We are going to close early this season because there's just nowhere near enough customers.'Liverpudlian party rep Danny, 30, who this summer is working for the Three Lions pub on the strip, said the drop in Brits is 'concerning'.'One hundred per cent there are fewer Brits, and they are the best customers because they spend the most, that's who we need, I saw four Italians sharing a tequila shot the other night.'There's concern on the strip but some are still doing well, obviously not as well as they want to, but still busy every night.'Locals have said they have been shocked by the number of families visiting this yearMagaluf is 'half-EMPTY, if that' and 'unusually quiet' - days after thousands of protesters called for an end to 'mass-tourism' Danny said the anti-tourism protests in nearby Palma de Mallorca - and across Spain - which attracted thousands of demonstrators earlier this year, have not helped.Footage from the protests showed irate locals holding placards reading 'tourists go home' and 'your holiday is our misery' - with some armed with water pistols to douse innocent holidaymakers.Danny said: 'Many don't feel welcome after seeing people spraying tourists with water guns, families don't want to be harassed like that.'I've worked here for nine years and it's changed loads, I've seen the decline.'I used to be able to give people two-for-one deals and a fish bowl, but now that's illegal on the strip.''We're giving away free smiles today ladies!', he jokingly quipped to a group of women passing by.Danny said he is hopeful that the strip will survive and that the government will be begging the Brits to return in force once they see effects of the drop in visitors.'They want it to be Calvia Beach Resort now but it will always be Magaluf,' he saidHe added that price rises are one of the key factors turning away Brits.It comes as the Balearic government this year revealed plans to raise the Sustainable Tourism Tax up to €6 (£5) per night in the peak season.It also said car rentals would be taxed up to €80 (£70), depending on the length of stay.Meanwhile, hotel and restaurant prices have risen 5 per cent year-on-year, according to the consumer price index.Anti-tourism protests in Spain have recently gone viral on social media. Pictured: A general view of the beach Jason Brown, 44, who runs Tom Brown's on the frontline of Magaluf, has witnessed decades of changes, as his restaurant was first bought by his father in 1981.He told Daily Mail: 'We've screwed ourselves a bit by trying to become solely for families so quickly.'Up the strip it's struggling the most because they don't want 'shagaluf' to be 'shagaluf' anymore.'I am frontline and I had an okay summer but the first week in September I am down 40 per cent.'This week we used to have lots of hen and stag dos but now they are going elsewhere.'Jason believes the fines for UK parents taking their children out of school for holidays is also bad for business - but so too are the anti-tourism protests that have repeatedly gone viral on social media.'I've had Brits messaging me asking if they will be welcome because they're genuinely worried,' he admitted.However, he said customers are now far more diverse and that businesses need to adapt.'I've got Brits who love us but then Germans telling me they don't like our burgers. And increasingly lots of Scandinavians and Italians, so it can be tough,' he said.'But Magaluf is changing and we have to adapt. We've got to accept it for what it is, I've doubled in size and got a kids play area now.'Indeed, there are businesses that are pleased with the move to a more family-friendly resort.Phoebe Malena, 21, from Mallorca, works at Boat Excursions on the front line.She told the Daily Mail: 'It's been great for us, now we have more people who actually want to see the island and enjoy nice days out, it's a change but a good one.'We have more families who want to spend more and who want to do nice activities instead of just drinking, so it is actually benefiting businesses like ours'We never did booze cruises so we have not been impacted by the crackdown.'
La generación actual de los que van de los 30-55 años son el núcleo duro de las Clases Medias Extractivas. Los que han metido todo su dinero en El Pisito, y tambien lo que se están hipotecando para especular.
Cita de: AbiertoPorDemolicion en Hoy a las 12:47:13La generación actual de los que van de los 30-55 años son el núcleo duro de las Clases Medias Extractivas. Los que han metido todo su dinero en El Pisito, y tambien lo que se están hipotecando para especular. -Ningun banco da hipotecas para especular. Ninguno sin un aval que cubra el 100%. -No existen personas de 30 años que sean clase media extractiva.Si quieres exculpar a los boomer, entonces culpas a sus herederos, por puro Scoring Bancario.Con ambas premisas, la conclusión es que mueran los boomers, y entonces los millennial, que son 6 millones menos, heredan un negocio que ya no da rentas. Fin.Es se llama PIRAMIDETAÚD.
Un estudio sobre vivienda revela que el 85% de las nuevas hipotecas compradas en España pertenecen a personas que ya tienen al menos una vivienda en propiedadSolo el 14% de las hipotecas corresponden a primera vivienda, según el análisis de ASUFIN, que evidencia las dificultades de acceso a la vivienda para nuevos compradores en el mercado español actualUn estudio de la Asociación de Usuarios Financieros (ASUFIN) revela que el 85% de las nuevas hipotecas contratadas en España corresponden a personas que ya son propietarias de al menos una vivienda. Los datos, publicados recientemente, muestran una clara distorsión en el mercado hipotecario actual, donde solo aproximadamente el 14% de los préstamos están destinados a la adquisición de una primera residencia. Esta situación refleja las crecientes dificultades que enfrentan los nuevos compradores para acceder a la vivienda en el país.Perfil de los compradores hipotecariosEl análisis desglosa que el 56% de las hipotecas corresponden a personas que adquieren inmuebles como inversión, mientras que un 19,1% se destina a segunda residencia y un 10,3% a cambio de vivienda habitual. Estos porcentajes contrastan marcadamente con el reducido 14% que representa a quienes buscan acceder a su primera vivienda. El estudio confirma así que la mayoría de los beneficiarios de nuevos créditos hipotecarios son ya propietarios que amplían su patrimonio inmobiliario.La asociación señala que, aunque algunos compradores continúan adquiriendo propiedades mediante pago al contado, la gran mayoría de las transacciones se financian mediante hipotecas. Este patrón de comportamiento refleja una tendencia preocupante donde los nuevos compradores se ven desplazados por inversores y personas que ya cuentan con recursos patrimoniales, profundizando la brecha en el acceso a la vivienda.