You haven't said where you are going
Haha.... Fark air quality, I'd rather live in a place where the food is good and not a second rate photocopy of the real thing costing 7X the price. Most countries in SE Asia are good for punting too!
I'd rather live in countries where the governments at least do something to safeguard the basic necessities of their citizens, rather than lead them down a path where they will end up being slaves to the wealthy or the profiteering banks.
A fine example of what Australia is about is the "Wakefield scheme", masterminded by a Edward Gibbon Wakefield, that created Adelaide as we know it. Check it out if you have time. The crux of this scheme was to stop giving land away to settlers (that's what Aussie colonial Govs used to do) but instead to price it at such a high price that skilled workers would need to go to Adelaide and work there for many years before they could afford the land.
Fast forward to now, the Gov is doing the same thing only under the guise of "free market", with a few "helping hands" of this grant or that scheme to "help" homebuyers buy a home. All smoke and mirrors, it's the same shitty carrot-dangling trick all over again.
In an earlier post, you said that pollies didn't care enough about housing for 10-20 years. Why would they? Their tenures in office don't even go close to that length of time. The entire democratic system we have is designed for pollies to get in, make a fast buck, and GTFO. Who would care what happens in 10-20 years if their time in office could potentially be as short as 4 years?
Your concerns are realistic. Means a lot of people will be wage slaves in this country, particularly if they are renting after the age of 65
I can't imagine the Federal Government, having the funds, to bail out everyone poor and struggling with rent
The government is trying to make universities and corporations happy by fattening their pockets. When their pockets get fatter, taxes get bigger. So government's pockets as get bigger. But all of this at the cost of taxpayers.
They'll wait until someone gets voted out, then attempt to repair the problem and introduce a new one in the background.
I have never seen any government fixing anything apart from Operation Sovereign Borders ( yes we had one new boat sneaked in last week) but all the issues and problems are basically bouncing back. Just take housing, every government promises to fix the housing affordability, it has almost turned into a joke!
I don't think the foreign aid is the main problem here. In fact Australia's contribution is one of the lowest in the OECD group (1.49 percent comes from Australia) so we are not really generous even if you consider population and GNI, and I'm not in any sense trying to say we have to be generous unless there is national interest behind it. You can check it here www.devpolicy.org The problem IMHO is lacking perspective into future. Massive migration and poor infrastructure.
“Trust no one” as Furry Fox Mulder once said. Though I do prefer the cigarette smoking man.