Jim Duncan

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Dad, Husband, Charlottesville Realtor, real estate Blogger, occasional speaker - Inman Connects, NAR Conferences - based in Charlottesville, Virginia. A native Virginian, I graduated from VMI in 1998, am a third generation Realtor (since 2001) and have been "publishing" as a real estate blogger since January 2005. I've chosen to get involved in Realtor Associations on the local, state & national levels, having served on the NAR's RPR & MLS groups. Find me in Charlottesville, Crozet and Twitter.

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7 Comments

  1. Jonathan Dalton

    Went to take my wife to dinner at a local chain Mexican food restaurant last night. Found it odd that the parking lot was empty. The sign on the door explaining the lease had not been paid explained it all.

    This restaurant had been on the corner for the 18-plus years I’ve lived on this side of town. Never mind that I didn’t much like the food the last decade and went only for the sake of my wife … 18 years.

    I don’t see the good in it.

  2. Missy Caulk

    Personally the only good I can see out of all this is that buyers who were shut out of the market can now enter with good interest rates and a choice of homes. This was not possible for many years in Ann Arbor so buyers had to move out of the city to afford a home.

    The other good thing is the amount of Realtors is decreasing.

    Oh yea, one more thing the Automotive Industry NEEDED restructuring and were not capable of doing it themselves.

  3. Bob

    Sorry, but I don’t buy this. I find the assumption that an economic tragedy which has destroyed countless lives has an upside, as incredibly offensive.

    During the boom I saw older neighborhoods see renovation take place as first time buyers lowered their sights and non-profits invested in these neighborhoods with funds from philanthropists. Now I see these same folks watch their hard work and both real and sweat equity go down the drain and the non-profits struggle to stay afloat.

    I believe that good things can come out of bad situations, but I don’t believe seeing 45% of the world’s wealth disappear in the last 18 months as something that should be characterized as a good thing.

    Not at all.

  4. Danilo Bogdanovic

    If every great society such as the Ottomans, Romans or Greeks had prospered forever, we would never be here on this continent as part of the “United States of America”. The same is true on a micro-level.

    People want success and properity and not failure because it suits them. But failure and recession is a necessary evil and part of life.

  5. Jim Duncan

    Bob –

    Please don’t mistake my attempt to see an upside as taking joy in what is happening …

    But there are going to be upsides –

    - more local food and a focus on “local” (”victory” gardens are coming back)
    - Neighbors are actually going to know each other – and the sociological benefits of this are tremendous.
    - A renewed focus on intrinsic value of homes rather than solely “equity”.

    I would argue that the “wealth” that has been lost was never there at all. I wrote in 2006:

    A sign of the out-of-balance perspective is a ditech commercial where the borrower says, “I just refinanced and got rid of all of my credit-card debt. If feels great to be out of debt!” If this isn’t a sign of a market screaming for normalcy, I don’t know what is.

    Cycles are natural, and every up must have a down.

  6. Ken Brand

    Intersting perspective. I believe one important thing is to really realize that things have changed forever. If ever there was a time to open our minds, re-evaluate and recreate how we approach building our business, deliver our services and nurture our relationships, this is it. Many slow to think and move will be left crying on the curb.

    My 3cents.

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