National Association of Realtors Proposes Housing Incentives
November 20, 2008
As a Realtor® and owner of a nationwide relocation company, I am daily faced with the effects of the economic meltdown on our real estate members all over the country. Consumer confidence is at an all time low which is adding to the current housing crisis. Buyers who have stable jobs and good income are postponing purchasing a home due to fear.
We need action by lawmakers NOW - not in January. Hopefully the lame duck Congress will listen to reason, and pass some meaningful bills! Bills that will RESTORE CONSUMER CONFIDENCE so that homebuyers are not frozen by fear! Even in areas which have a strong economy (low unemployment, healthy job outlook, no real estate bubble bursting) buyers are holding off buying – waiting for a lower interest rate, or the assurance that they'll buy at the absolute bottom price. They are also frustrated with the current lending environment that places a variety of barriers to getting a mortgage. This further impedes sales and price stabilization of the housing market.
A recent consumer survey conducted by Realogy Corp. (a National Association of Realtors ® member) stated how important housing is to this country's economic recovery. The survey found that nine out of 10 homeowners believe that owning a home is still the best long-term investment. But this same survey said that most people are not buying right now because of uncertainty about the market.
Recently the National Association of Realtors® sent a letter to U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson outlining steps he could take to stabilize the housing market. They also presented this plan to the House Financial Services Committee on November 18th. The four steps the recommended are:
1) Make the $7,500 first-time homebuyer tax credit available to all homebuyers and eliminate the repayment requirement.
2) Make the increased 2008 FHA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac loan limits permanent so that all American families can find a safe and affordable mortgage when buying a home.
3) Get the $700 billion Treasury relief program back on track and focused on providing stability to the nation's housing markets and reducing foreclosures.
4) Bar banks from real estate brokerage and management activities permanently, to avoid exposing consumers and the economy to more unnecessary risks.
NAR also provided an economic analysis demonstrating that a reduction, or a buydown, of interest rates by just 1 percentage point could result in up to 840,000 additional home sales and reduce the inventory of homes by as much as 20 percent. Substantially lower mortgage rates would stimulate both existing- and new-home sales.
These are great first steps to getting home sales going again.
It was Richard Nixon who said, "A recession is anytime people lose confidence in the future." Now is the time to restore confidence, people!
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National Association of Realtors Proposes Housing Incentives
November 20, 2008
As a Realtor® and owner of a nationwide relocation company, I am daily faced with the effects of the economic meltdown on our real estate members all over the country. Consumer confidence is at an all time low which is adding to the current housing crisis. Buyers who have stable jobs and good income are postponing purchasing a home due to fear.
We need action by lawmakers NOW - not in January. Hopefully the lame duck Congress will listen to reason, and pass some meaningful bills! Bills that will RESTORE CONSUMER CONFIDENCE so that homebuyers are not frozen by fear! Even in areas which have a strong economy (low unemployment, healthy job outlook, no real estate bubble bursting) buyers are holding off buying – waiting for a lower interest rate, or the assurance that they'll buy at the absolute bottom price. They are also frustrated with the current lending environment that places a variety of barriers to getting a mortgage. This further impedes sales and price stabilization of the housing market.
A recent consumer survey conducted by Realogy Corp. (a National Association of Realtors ® member) stated how important housing is to this country's economic recovery. The survey found that nine out of 10 homeowners believe that owning a home is still the best long-term investment. But this same survey said that most people are not buying right now because of uncertainty about the market.
Recently the National Association of Realtors® sent a letter to U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson outlining steps he could take to stabilize the housing market. They also presented this plan to the House Financial Services Committee on November 18th. The four steps the recommended are:
1) Make the $7,500 first-time homebuyer tax credit available to all homebuyers and eliminate the repayment requirement.
2) Make the increased 2008 FHA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac loan limits permanent so that all American families can find a safe and affordable mortgage when buying a home.
3) Get the $700 billion Treasury relief program back on track and focused on providing stability to the nation's housing markets and reducing foreclosures.
4) Bar banks from real estate brokerage and management activities permanently, to avoid exposing consumers and the economy to more unnecessary risks.
NAR also provided an economic analysis demonstrating that a reduction, or a buydown, of interest rates by just 1 percentage point could result in up to 840,000 additional home sales and reduce the inventory of homes by as much as 20 percent. Substantially lower mortgage rates would stimulate both existing- and new-home sales.
These are great first steps to getting home sales going again.
It was Richard Nixon who said, "A recession is anytime people lose confidence in the future." Now is the time to restore confidence, people!
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Local Information for Kingsland, GA
Latitude: 30.794612 -- Longitude: -81.67172
Other Area Cities:
Kingsland
St Marys
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As of the censusGR2 of 2000, there were 10,506 people, 3,620 households, and 2,722 families residing in the city. The population density was 242.5/km² (627.9/mi²). There were 4,203 housing units at an average density of 97.0/km² (251.2/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 73.25% White, 21.14% African American, 0.58% Native American, 1.54% Asian, 0.06% Pacific Islander, 1.24% from other races, and 2.19% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 3.61% of the population.
There were 3,620 households out of which 50.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 60.4% were married couples living together, 11.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 24.8% were non-families. 19.0% of all households were made up of individuals and 3.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.90 and the average family size was 3.34.
-- Source: Wikipedia.com
Georgia 2000 Census Population Profile Map
|
Kingsland |
Georgia |
United States |
|---|
| Population |
10,506 |
8,186,453 |
281,421,906 |
|---|
| Median age |
27.9 |
33.4 |
35.3 |
|---|
| Median age for Male |
27.2 |
32.1 |
34 |
|---|
| Median age for Female |
28.6 |
34.6 |
36.5 |
|---|
| Households |
3,620 |
3,006,369 |
105,480,101 |
|---|
| Household population |
10,506 |
7,952,631 |
273,643,273 |
|---|
| Average household size |
2.9 |
2.65 |
2.59 |
|---|
| Families |
2,721 |
2,111,647 |
71,787,347 |
|---|
| Average family size |
3.34 |
3.14 |
3.14 |
|---|
| Housing units |
4,203 |
3,281,737 |
115,904,641 |
|---|
| Occupied units |
3,620 |
3,006,369 |
105,480,101 |
|---|
| Vacant units |
583 |
275,368 |
10,424,540 |
|---|
Visit US Census
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Nancy Bailey
ERA Kings Bay Realty
580 Kenneth Gay Drive
Kingsland, GA 31548
VOICE: 800-542-4388
TOLL FREE: 800-542-4388
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