In the past week we have been dealing with three houses currently for sale.
They are what you would loosely call "high end" houses.
As you wander around with the agent, the usual exchanges take place about size and quality and renovations and street and area, talk about the market, what's the vibe etc.
But the question we always ask, is why are they selling?
You ask that for a clue. Are they downsizing, what's changed, have they been there their whole lives or have they transferred?
The three houses all had the same reason - they are leaving the country.
This was not good because, as I expressed on the programme last week, I am finding the immigration figures depressing.
I read over the weekend that suddenly universities in Australia are closing their book for internationals because they are inundated.
We are not inundated.
I read that the Anthony Albanese Government is under pressure on immigration because they promised to curb it.
They haven't curbed it. One of the major reasons they haven't curbed it is because shedloads of us are bailing from New Zealand and arriving at their place and, given CER, there is nothing they can do.
In the case of the three houses, one have their kids already ensconced in Australia and the parents are looking to join them and the other two families are off to Europe.
That's good news for the agents because all three houses will sell. The issue after that is, who buys them?
Our immigration figures will be a discussion of some angst sometime next year. Because as things stand, there is no sign of the departures easing but there is a very real sign of the arrivals stalling.
The arrivals are mainly from India, Fiji, Indonesia and China. Culturally, the face of New Zealand is changing dramatically.
As we learned last week, a bit over 1% of those arriving applied for a skilled visa. The rest, presumably, are baristas, chefs and construction workers.
The demise of this country is alarmingly real. Most haven't woken up to it yet. The Government knows the problem and they are working hard to, at worst, stall it but, hopefully, to reverse it.
But as we have said for years, the numbers don’t lie.
And I can show you three houses for sale right now that tell you the trend is real.
Mike Hosking is a New Zealand television and radio broadcaster. He currently hosts The Mike Hosking Breakfast show on NewstalkZB on weekday mornings - where this article was sourced.
The three houses all had the same reason - they are leaving the country.
This was not good because, as I expressed on the programme last week, I am finding the immigration figures depressing.
I read over the weekend that suddenly universities in Australia are closing their book for internationals because they are inundated.
We are not inundated.
I read that the Anthony Albanese Government is under pressure on immigration because they promised to curb it.
They haven't curbed it. One of the major reasons they haven't curbed it is because shedloads of us are bailing from New Zealand and arriving at their place and, given CER, there is nothing they can do.
In the case of the three houses, one have their kids already ensconced in Australia and the parents are looking to join them and the other two families are off to Europe.
That's good news for the agents because all three houses will sell. The issue after that is, who buys them?
Our immigration figures will be a discussion of some angst sometime next year. Because as things stand, there is no sign of the departures easing but there is a very real sign of the arrivals stalling.
The arrivals are mainly from India, Fiji, Indonesia and China. Culturally, the face of New Zealand is changing dramatically.
As we learned last week, a bit over 1% of those arriving applied for a skilled visa. The rest, presumably, are baristas, chefs and construction workers.
The demise of this country is alarmingly real. Most haven't woken up to it yet. The Government knows the problem and they are working hard to, at worst, stall it but, hopefully, to reverse it.
But as we have said for years, the numbers don’t lie.
And I can show you three houses for sale right now that tell you the trend is real.
Mike Hosking is a New Zealand television and radio broadcaster. He currently hosts The Mike Hosking Breakfast show on NewstalkZB on weekday mornings - where this article was sourced.
8 comments:
Mike, if the woke Luxon stopped all of the maori bullying and backed up David Seymour regarding the treaty myths and lies a lot more people would stay here. The majority of voters gave a clear message to National but gutless politicians have rolled over to the maori elite and the communist academics. With extreme biased help from the mainstream media. Kiwialan.
I share your concerns Mike. It’s not a question that the face of NZ is changing, it has changed permanently. And this Govt like all previous Governments have done nothing to staunch it.
The antics of Te Pati televised around the world, plus the hikoi will ensure that quality immigrants give primitive stone age anchored NZ a miss. A major loss for maori whose state houses and myriad benefits rely on the taxes from an industrious and able workforce of others.
Tremble - when you think what the Left will do to anyone with assets when they next gain power.....
Immigration or emigration?
Luxon just does NOT measure up as a political leader . Weak and ineffective without the ability to understand the nation . This is NOT the corporate world and Maori are NOT corporate shareholders and are definitely and impossibly NOT in a "partnership with Governement"
This same exodus happened in Sth Africa in the 1960s and 70s.
If Luxon continues, he will seek an outright majority OR another coalition in 2026. With which party? The next election could be chaotic.
Luxon continues to show his arrogance by completely disregarding those who put the National Party into Government. He is naive in the extreme if he believes the country hasn’t already fallen into an apartheid system. No amount of economic wizardry will turn the tide. If major changes aren’t made to the ongoing Treaty Settlement process, this and future generations will be personally paying more taxes/rates to support faux Māori, who most certainly haven’t been personally disenfranchised, and I stress “personally”.
Post a Comment