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<blockquote data-quote="merino" data-source="post: 7860374" data-attributes="member: 15902"><p>You know, ordinary people having rights is a thing that's typically held to be a sign of success in a country. </p><p></p><p>As for land prices, how they are going to perform relatively is quite important as well.</p><p>There's a connection there. </p><p></p><p>But as a lot of you will not accept that the UK isn't the greatest country conceivable (second to perhaps the England without THOSE PEOPLE) I'll spare myself the bother. </p><p>I think a steady real terms decline for second quality UK land for the rest of the decade is likely given the reduction in payments.</p><p></p><p>The rest of Europe isn't going to be doing that.</p><p>There's this idea that some change in prices will force activity out of the Tories. To which I say, people are starving now, that's to death, in the UK. What's a few more?</p><p>What's a hundred a week? </p><p>Hundred a week are dying of covid now and nobody gives a f**k.</p><p></p><p>There's great enthusiasm for development land money and roll over on here but that kind of feeds back into that problem there. Everywhere else does that, but the UK's going to be doing less of it, that is less relative to it's potential and less relative to the continent, you know, as a result of the problems I'm not mentioning.</p><p></p><p> A cumulative three precent difference is fifty percent in thirteen years.</p><p></p><p>Or you know, the difference between the UK and Slovenia.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Maybe there's going to be a fantastic growth in some sector that offsets all this. I doubt it, maybe the Tories will pump up the housing market to such an extreme level so as to keep the roll over money going and the average price high. I don't know, I really doubt it.</p><p></p><p>Just what's going to happen is you're going to go on holiday in a European country of your choice after a successful harvest and you are going to find out that your first rate effort isn't so flash across the channel, and that's a problem.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="merino, post: 7860374, member: 15902"] You know, ordinary people having rights is a thing that's typically held to be a sign of success in a country. As for land prices, how they are going to perform relatively is quite important as well. There's a connection there. But as a lot of you will not accept that the UK isn't the greatest country conceivable (second to perhaps the England without THOSE PEOPLE) I'll spare myself the bother. I think a steady real terms decline for second quality UK land for the rest of the decade is likely given the reduction in payments. The rest of Europe isn't going to be doing that. There's this idea that some change in prices will force activity out of the Tories. To which I say, people are starving now, that's to death, in the UK. What's a few more? What's a hundred a week? Hundred a week are dying of covid now and nobody gives a f**k. There's great enthusiasm for development land money and roll over on here but that kind of feeds back into that problem there. Everywhere else does that, but the UK's going to be doing less of it, that is less relative to it's potential and less relative to the continent, you know, as a result of the problems I'm not mentioning. A cumulative three precent difference is fifty percent in thirteen years. Or you know, the difference between the UK and Slovenia. Maybe there's going to be a fantastic growth in some sector that offsets all this. I doubt it, maybe the Tories will pump up the housing market to such an extreme level so as to keep the roll over money going and the average price high. I don't know, I really doubt it. Just what's going to happen is you're going to go on holiday in a European country of your choice after a successful harvest and you are going to find out that your first rate effort isn't so flash across the channel, and that's a problem. [/QUOTE]
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