বেশ ভালো লাগলো ভ্লগটা। আসলে দিন দিন ভাড়া নিয়ে সবজায়গাতেই সমস্যা চলছে। যদিও ঢাকায় এখনো তেমন ব্যাপক ভাবে সমস্যা নেই তবুও বেশ চাপ আছে। তোমাদের ওখানে কত নিয়ম, এতো নিয়ম কানুনের আইন মেনে তারপর ঘর!! তা ও যদি কপালে থাকে। তোমরা সবাই খুব ভালো থেকো। ধন্যবাদ।
এইদেশে বাড়ির কোয়ালিটি এবং সেই বাড়িতে সুযোগসুবিধা, আশেপাশের পরিবেশের পরিষ্কার পরিচ্ছন্নতা অনেক বেশি, এশিয়ার দেশগুলির তুলনায় তাই স্বাভাবিক ভাবেই সেগুলিকে বজায় রাখার জন্য নিয়মকানুনও কড়াকড়ি, নইলে তো লোকে অন্যের বাড়িতে থাকতে গিয়ে নোংরা করে, জিনিসপত্র ভেঙেচুরে খারাপ করে দেবে..ধন্যবাদ আপনার মতামতের জন্য..খুব ভালো থাকবেন.
Hi Trisha, your videos are just awesome full of information. I can understand that to give such detailed information it needs a lots of hard work. Tomra sobai khub bhalo theko.
I have been hearing this housing crisis in Australia for quite some time. So what is the government or the real estate industry doing about it? If there is a business opportunity why aren’t they constructing more houses?
There are many factors contributing to the housing crisis in Australia. Wages only went up by 2.4% between March 2021 to March 2022 - 7 times slower than property prices. The combination of Australia’s high population growth, record high immigration after pandemic, the concentration of half the population in the three largest cities and the shape of those cities with high-density CBDs and expansive low density suburbs means well-located land - land where people can live near to jobs and services - is in ever-increasingly short supply and rising in value at rates that make it increasingly out of reach for many Australians. Due to pandemic there were supply chain disruptions, which meant that everyone from contractors to manufacturers were hit with limited supplies of building materials. There was also a labour shortage due to travel and movement restrictions. This has resulted in delays in home construction and a decrease in the overall supply of homes. There are higher costs in building in the regions due to shortages of specialised labour, extra costs to bring in building materials, requirements to build to expensive standards in bushfire prone areas, difficulty obtaining bank loans in economically restricted areas, and higher costs of housing insurance in areas at risk of fire and flood. The Australian government is currently using various ways to provide more affordable housing but it can't be fixed overnight.
Thanks for your detailed analysis of the situation. True that a problem does not arise overnight and neither can be solved overnight. But I just hope that people in the government and industry take cognizance of the situation and do something fast before it becomes unmanageable and start affecting the growth of the country. I think development and environment have become antonyms and you need to strike a balance between the two. Brisbane I hear is gearing up to host 2032 Olympics. It will be nice to hear your perspective on that in a video.