An 87-year-old woman from Lemiers in Limburg who owned substantial real estate in nearby Vaals has left most of it to her tenants in her will.

According to the Telegraaf, Anneliese Houppermans, who earned her money from a successful fruit and vegetable business, owned several houses in the community. She never married or had children, and her ties to her family had faded over the years.

  • Xenny@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This to a certain extent extent is what we should be doing with housing. We’ve got a huge problem with elderly Care and who’s going to take care of them and where the money is coming from. And we’ve got a huge problem with rent going out of control going into people’s pockets that aren’t going to use the money for anything. Why aren’t rents just going to pay towards people’s elderly Care I don’t understand.

    We should use housing to lift up those who came before us and can’t carry as much as their own anymore as well as enriching those who come into replace them.

    We pay for your retirement. We get the house. Then those after us pay for our retirement. The cycle continues.

    • Foofighter@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      Every generation should finance their own retirements. Fluctuating population will lead to few having to finance many. This is the state of affairs in Germany, where old people live in both huge places and are paid pensions which will be unreachable for the younger generation.

      I live in a village with many single family houses from the 70s and 80s. The people living here are old and are either not capable or willing to invest in their homes Understandable in my opinion. Why invest if you know you’ll die in 10 years…

      What I wished would happen that older people would downsize. It is common for older people to live in their 7 room house they build for their entire family of 5. Children all grown up and in different cities, house not maintained and only partially heated.

      Feels like pragmatism dies before the rest. Just move to a smaller apartment and give the house meant for families back to families …

      • redisdead@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Work all your life

        Able to afford stuff

        Retire, want to enjoy your stuff

        Random ass guy: your stuff is too big, you should sell it because I’m jealous and I want it.

  • 👍Maximum Derek👍@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    At first (because I’m a rapidly evolving into my final curmudgeon form) this put me in mind of those families that ended up losing their house after appearing on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition because they could no longer afford the taxes and upkeep on their houses. But this line of the article helped put me at ease:

    “I only have to pay €75,000 in inheritance tax which I have turned into a mortgage. I have effectively been given €200,000, it’s great,” he said.

      • Redredme@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Welcome to Holland, we’ve arranged good dikes, good infrastructure, social benefits and affordable healthcare for all.

        How do we pay for all of it?

        Yeah… You now know how. We pay a lot of tax. And I mean a lot. 17+ % VAT on everything. Cars have an extra tax called bpm of around 20%. So half the price of a car is tax. 1 litre (not a gallon!) of ron95? Over 2 euros. Etc. (because that’s not all)

        It’s fun.

        And thats why we are tall. Because if we weren’t we would drown in our taxes ;)

        • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Dutch people pay so much tax because dutch companies pay so little tax, so pretty much the entire burden of paying the costs of the State comes from the wallets of individuals (whilst companies too are owned by individuals, those rich enough have many ways of avoiding paying tax on that and a lot of the biggest owners of the companies making profits in The Netherlands - whilst paying little tax on said profits - aren’t even resident in The Netherlands).

          In countries were the tax take is more evenly balanced between people and businesses, people pay less taxes for more services (The Netherlands doesn’t even have a National Health Service, only a mixed Health Insurance system).

          I lived in The Netherlands over a decade ago and already back then the country already had Northern European levels of taxation with nowhere near the levels of Public Services that countries with similar individual taxation - such as the Scandinavians - had and I doubt a decade of right-wing neoliberals in government has made things any better.