man this area has prices of plots goin up overnit plot ya 6 m ata huezi amini juu yalocation.am made 2 understand u can buy air within no tym.which talker can provide better in4 bout this place.below r 100 /50 plots behind mseries going for 4m but what made me shiver is the seller.he has bout 4 of them but is poor as fuck.hes disabled n looks genuine but living in a shanty house with ile inakaa maskan zenye tulitae.any whats your thoughts
Fake id matching the one on the
Title at Lands registry will convince you the old cripple is the owner.
Ile siku utajaribu kumwaga mawe utashangaa.
Hit my inbox if you are interested in buying a prime plot in a well developed area. I personally know the person selling.
The price of land is skyrocketing at an alarming rate, will there come a time when the price will stagnate or drop?
When meeting this guy dont drive,chukua nduthi. Beba simu ya kabambe na soo mbili kwa wallet. Also wear a tampon or a butt plug!
Am assisting the dude if he’s genuinely looking for a plot .
When it comes to insults and baloney, I doubt if you can be a match.
depends with our economy ikicollapse itakuwa ka ile biz ya quails
Not any time soon especially now banks are tightening rules on customer details and the source of money banked. Real estate offers a perfect solution for the corrupt to hide their money.
lakini mi ni mkulima mdogo price ni?
4.5m.
You can negotiate with the owner to get the final price.
we huko sifiki acha nihustle kwanza ama niende juja
Many so called middle class will never catch up to where their parents were. It’s sad. A new generation should always do better than the last. The rate at which the price of land is skyrocketing is immoral and obscene.
Huko ni wapi bros?
Vitu muhimu kama Haya Always involve a lawyer when in doubt. Sidhani if the lawyer would charge you an arm and leg for such services.
Kamakis plot are expensive,that I can assure you,dont know why,but usidharau the seller provided you play your part keenly.
The price of land in kenya will rise until when the land will be unaffordable, leading to many people lacking access to this means of production, leading to low fiscal productivity, leading to low production of food and industry, leading to civil disorder when masses of people get jobless and hungry, leading to land revolutions, somewhere in the year 2040 and beyond, leading to land reforms , leading to stable land prices, finally to a prosperous economy. Before that, only the high class land owners will enjoy the benefits of the economy.
Price of a 1/8th in a middle class neighbourhood eg kitengela, at kes 2m, will rise till very few will be able to afford it, at maybe 15m in the year 2030 and beyond. Incomes will remain the same so when the income vs land price gap becomes too unsustainable, civil disobedience and land reforms will be the answer.
@a4architect that’s a gloomy prediction man
endelea kungoja bei ishuke…
@Bingi, at least this will not happen in our lifetimes…the prediction is based on land reforms as happend in south america.
If you do a simple extrapolation of land cost increase vs income increase, its very easy to see that at some point in future, land will be unaffordable. Owners of the land will not feel philanthropic towards peasants hence my prediction.
[SIZE=5]Latin America[edit][/SIZE]
[I]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/27/MST_International_Socialist46623.jpeg/300px-MST_International_Socialist46623.jpeg[/I]
Children singing the Internationale, at the 20th Anniversary of Brazil’s Landless Workers Movement
[SIZE=4]Brazil[edit][/SIZE]
[I]GetĂşlio Vargas, who rose to presidency in Brazil following the Brazilian Revolution of 1930, promised a land reform but reneged on his promise.
A first attempt to make a national scale reform was set up in the government of José Sarney (1985–1990), as a result of the strong popular movement that had contributed to the fall of the military government. According to the 1988 Constitution of Brazil, the government is required to “expropriate for the purpose of agrarian reform, rural property that is not performing its social function” (Article 184). However, the “social function” mentioned there is not well defined, and hence the so-called First Land Reform National Plan never was put into force.
Throughout the 1990s, the Landless Workers’ Movement has led a strong campaign in favor of fulfilling the constitutional requirement to land reform. They also took direct action by forceful occupation of unused lands. Their campaign has managed to get some advances for the past 10 years, during the Fernando Cardoso and Lula da Silva administrations.
It is overseen by the National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform.
[/I]
[SIZE=4]Bolivia[edit]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_reforms_by_country [/SIZE]