Spain's attempt at doing away with mortgages altogether
BBC News
In the wake of Spain's property crash, hundreds of thousands of homes have been repossessed. While one regional government says it will seize repossessed properties from the banks, a little town is doing away with mortgages altogether.
In Marinaleda, residents like 42-year-old father-of-three, David Gonzalez Molina, are building their own homes.
While he burrows with a pneumatic drill into the earth, David nonchalantly says it "should take a couple of years".
However, when his new house is finished he will have paid "absolutely nothing".
Free bricks and mortar
The town hall in this small, aesthetically unremarkable town an hour-and-a-bit east of Seville, has given David 190 sq m (2,000 sq ft) of land.
He and others are only eligible after they have been registered residents of Marinaleda for at least two years.
“Start Quote
A home should be a right, and not a business”
Juan Manuel Sanchez Gordillo Mayor of Marinaleda
The bricks and mortar are also a gift, this time from the regional government of Andalusia.
Only once his home is finished will he start paying 15 euros (£13) a month, to the regional government, to refund the cost of other building materials.
Of course, most people do not know how to build a house, so the town hall in Marinaleda throws in some expertise.
It employs several professional builders and plumbers, a couple of whom work alongside David, to help him construct his house.
Taking the law into his own hands
The town's controversial bearded Mayor, Juan Manuel Sanchez Gordillo, is known for occupying land belonging to the wealthy in Andalusia.
Mayor Juan Manuel Sanchez Gordillo in his office with a picture of Che Guevara on the wall. The mayor's office features a picture of Che Guevara and the Spanish republican flag
Last summer, he and his left-wing union comrades stole from supermarkets and handed out the food to the poor.
"I think it is possible that a home should be a right, and not a business, in Europe", he argues.
Mayor Sanchez Gordillo pours scorn on "speculators", whom he blames for the fact that the price of property in parts of Spain, Europe and the world is often "thousands of times its real value".
"The composition of the land in London and on the coast of Spain is practically the same", he says.
While the Marinaleda experiment is unique, there is a growing backlash against conventional property law elsewhere in Spain.
At the end of last year, the national government brought in a new law to suspend housing repossessions for families hardest hit by the economic crisis.
And the opposition-run government in Spain's largest region, Andalusia, where there are an estimated 690,000 empty properties, has since gone further.
A law - driven by the Spanish Socialist Party's (PSOE) coalition partner in Andalusia, the United Left Party (IU) - allows the regional government temporarily to seize a property from a bank, if that property is at risk of being repossessed because the owner cannot meet the payments on their mortgage.
With unemployment in Andalusia at a record 37%, huge numbers of people have already been evicted.
Payback for banks
The Secretary-General for Housing in Andalusia, Amanda Meyer, says thousands of families were "tricked" into taking out a mortgage and that their situation is now "hellish".
In reference to Spain's bank bailout, which the eurozone agreed last summer, Ms Meyer believes that the banks have received tens of billions of euros of public money and given nothing back.
She rejects the idea that her government's law will play havoc with the region's property market, saying that a rental rate will be paid to banks for properties which the government expropriates from them.
"We will create a fair rental market with the right transparency and liquidity to make sure everybody has access to a home," she says.
Full Article:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22701384
In the wake of Spain's property crash, hundreds of thousands of homes have been repossessed. While one regional government says it will seize repossessed properties from the banks, a little town is doing away with mortgages altogether.
In Marinaleda, residents like 42-year-old father-of-three, David Gonzalez Molina, are building their own homes.
While he burrows with a pneumatic drill into the earth, David nonchalantly says it "should take a couple of years".
However, when his new house is finished he will have paid "absolutely nothing".
Free bricks and mortar
The town hall in this small, aesthetically unremarkable town an hour-and-a-bit east of Seville, has given David 190 sq m (2,000 sq ft) of land.
He and others are only eligible after they have been registered residents of Marinaleda for at least two years.
“Start Quote
A home should be a right, and not a business”
Juan Manuel Sanchez Gordillo Mayor of Marinaleda
The bricks and mortar are also a gift, this time from the regional government of Andalusia.
Only once his home is finished will he start paying 15 euros (£13) a month, to the regional government, to refund the cost of other building materials.
Of course, most people do not know how to build a house, so the town hall in Marinaleda throws in some expertise.
It employs several professional builders and plumbers, a couple of whom work alongside David, to help him construct his house.
Taking the law into his own hands
The town's controversial bearded Mayor, Juan Manuel Sanchez Gordillo, is known for occupying land belonging to the wealthy in Andalusia.
Mayor Juan Manuel Sanchez Gordillo in his office with a picture of Che Guevara on the wall. The mayor's office features a picture of Che Guevara and the Spanish republican flag
Last summer, he and his left-wing union comrades stole from supermarkets and handed out the food to the poor.
"I think it is possible that a home should be a right, and not a business, in Europe", he argues.
Mayor Sanchez Gordillo pours scorn on "speculators", whom he blames for the fact that the price of property in parts of Spain, Europe and the world is often "thousands of times its real value".
"The composition of the land in London and on the coast of Spain is practically the same", he says.
While the Marinaleda experiment is unique, there is a growing backlash against conventional property law elsewhere in Spain.
At the end of last year, the national government brought in a new law to suspend housing repossessions for families hardest hit by the economic crisis.
And the opposition-run government in Spain's largest region, Andalusia, where there are an estimated 690,000 empty properties, has since gone further.
A law - driven by the Spanish Socialist Party's (PSOE) coalition partner in Andalusia, the United Left Party (IU) - allows the regional government temporarily to seize a property from a bank, if that property is at risk of being repossessed because the owner cannot meet the payments on their mortgage.
With unemployment in Andalusia at a record 37%, huge numbers of people have already been evicted.
Payback for banks
The Secretary-General for Housing in Andalusia, Amanda Meyer, says thousands of families were "tricked" into taking out a mortgage and that their situation is now "hellish".
In reference to Spain's bank bailout, which the eurozone agreed last summer, Ms Meyer believes that the banks have received tens of billions of euros of public money and given nothing back.
She rejects the idea that her government's law will play havoc with the region's property market, saying that a rental rate will be paid to banks for properties which the government expropriates from them.
"We will create a fair rental market with the right transparency and liquidity to make sure everybody has access to a home," she says.
Full Article:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22701384