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<blockquote data-quote="ollie989898" data-source="post: 5847154" data-attributes="member: 54866"><p>The point Clive is making is that rents will have to sit at a level that is sustainable for the tenant, or they won't take on the rent in the first place, why would they? The rental market for land will thus be entirely determined by what the earning potential of that land, or what the range of prospective tenants believe it is, not distorting it with EU funny money and all that entails. A simple sales-costs= profit calculation that a lot of people are capable of doing although some still seem to struggle with calculators I admit.</p><p></p><p>In areas where there is high demand for rented land, the rents will remain high. In areas where no one wants it or if the land is problematic and won't grow wheat well, rents will drop. In reality it t'was ever thus, only the curtain of funny money obscures this.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ollie989898, post: 5847154, member: 54866"] The point Clive is making is that rents will have to sit at a level that is sustainable for the tenant, or they won't take on the rent in the first place, why would they? The rental market for land will thus be entirely determined by what the earning potential of that land, or what the range of prospective tenants believe it is, not distorting it with EU funny money and all that entails. A simple sales-costs= profit calculation that a lot of people are capable of doing although some still seem to struggle with calculators I admit. In areas where there is high demand for rented land, the rents will remain high. In areas where no one wants it or if the land is problematic and won't grow wheat well, rents will drop. In reality it t'was ever thus, only the curtain of funny money obscures this. [/QUOTE]
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