We read in the ARA What are the Spanish government's measures to stop the rise in oil prices, which is causing everything else to go up, with or without cause? It's obvious that the barrels of oil we're consuming today were in the warehouses of the world's powerful elite, and that they raised the price to keep things moving. And it's obvious that the vegetables from overseas that you consume (I avoid them) arrived by plane and ship months ago, and that the cold storage facilities where they were kept months ago were also powered by electricity that hadn't yet become so expensive, triggering this domino effect we half-concocted. The government's measures are to lower the VAT on fuel, gas, and electricity. Amid the usual tug-of-war between parties (now I'm asking for more, so it looks like I'm putting pressure on you, now I can't grant you this so I don't look like a pushover), Sumar has managed to include, for now, "the automatic extension of rent."
On the big screen, everything seems fine. On the small screen, it's another story. The owner of a bachelor pad who is paying the mortgage with the rent from tenants, expecting his son to move in next year to pay it off, what should he do if it's decreed that the tenants can't leave when this happens? The owner of an apartment with tenants who wants to sell when the lease expires, but can't raise the price, what should he do?
Housing prices are our biggest problem. There's a huge difference between young people who come into the world with a home, with half a home, or without one at all. Some parents can offer financial help to rent or buy. Some can't. The word eviction It always makes us think of greedy vultures and helpless poor people. It's all much more complex. If we decree the measure of automatic rental of a given apartment, why don't we also decree the measure of renewing the mortgage interest rates for that same apartment, at a low price, so that the owner doesn't go bankrupt?