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Why? Many youngsters don’t want to be tied to a house, like having an anvil around their neck. Maintenance, ‘improvements’, estate agents and solicitors ridiculous fees, all add up.When rent payments are higher than mortgage payments would be on the same property, buying a house is a good thing.
(disclaimer- I write as someone knocking on the door of middle age)
Some people will say that would be a good thing, but you will still get fewer properties for rent so rents will go up and not everyone can buy.
I blame:I blame estate agents for literally talking up prices.
I get fewer properties for rent, but if some people who previously rented bought a house (which follows from fewer houses being available to rent) there are fewer people who want to rent so rents may well fall. Particularly so as its the better off renters who will buy.
Absolutely.What is our new prime ministers plan ? dun dun dun .......print another 150 billion we dont have and let the future worry about it keep the plebs sedated for another year or two
Anyone with 2 braincells to rub together can see that all this is doing is creating a problem for further down the line prolonging the agony so to speak ...
It honestly is petrifying because there just doesn't seem to be any plan at all
Government is printing money like water and at the same time the bank of England is raising rates at a rollercoaster rate
make it make sense ??
I agree, but also don't agree.A lot is because the people at the top are in their late 40's,50's and above and already have family capital - they just have no concept of what it must be like for a younger person trying to get on the ladder with no family money as a deposit and a huge debt from going to uni to try and get a job good enough to get a mortgage big enough to get a house.
As you say it is a game of musical chairs and the dj's hand is hovering over the stop button
Probably because of the governments scrappage scheme aligned with better production methods, rustproofing, paint etc., and easy credit.These days kids don't just want a car they want something nice. You hardly ever see anyone in a banger, in fact young people wouldn't even know what a banger was.
Cars still rust believe me ! Especially Fords which I have always had but have decided no more, because, they rust. I keep my cars a long time and my Focus 2006 has needed rust repairing on it multiple times, including much work required when it was only about 12 years old. I've just had two new wings on it and I looked at the old ones, they had almost no paint / anti rust on the insides. It's disgusting really.Probably because of the governments scrappage scheme aligned with better production methods, rustproofing, paint etc., and easy credit.
When i lived on the farm in the 70/80's my stepfather did car repairs over the winter. I would say the majority of his work then was body panels. Morris minor inner wings seemed to be a monthly job !! but more generally sills, outer wings, footwells etc.Cars still rust believe me ! Especially Fords which I have always had but have decided no more, because, they rust. I keep my cars a long time and my Focus 2006 has needed rust repairing on it multiple times, including much work required when it was only about 12 years old. I've just had two new wings on it and I looked at the old ones, they had almost no paint / anti rust on the insides. It's disgusting really.
My wife's Toyota, on the other hand, an 08 plate Yaris, has very little serious rust on it at 14 years old. Thus my next car will be a Toyota or a Volvo....
"Easy credit"
Just because they have "easy credit" available is no reason for people who want to buy a house to avail themselves of it !
this totallyI've not been following this thread so apologies if I take it off track a little, but with reference to house prices and wages i've often questioned the following.
Here in my part of Essex you'd be looking at £250k to get a small starter family home.
In Sunderland you can stay dry and get a roof over your head for £60k
Paying a 'southern mortgage' is a real struggle financially, but how come those 'upt north' aren't revelling in the bonanza of earning the same minimum wage and presumably paying off their mortgages in years rather than decades?
How very strange that he doesn't mention Brexit!A section of an article by Chris Snowdon (from the Institute of Economic Affairs) in The Times - 5th Sept. And this is why inflation could literally go anywhere... :
It is hard to ignore the legacy of Covid-19 in all this [high energy bills and the cost of living crisis]. During the pandemic governments created a staggeringly expensive system of universal welfare in which the state did not merely help people through hard times but sought to insulate them from economic reality.
With the precedent set we are now in danger of treating every problem like a once in a generation crisis.
If it has two bedrooms you can have a lodger. My son did exactly that.And there is no chance at that size you would have room for a lodger - it is a shoebox that you can afford as a starter home (and getting smaller)
True, though my house was actually three bedrooms, but the third one was a box room, and, as estate agents say "the downstairs is commensurate with a two bedroom house" (it was literally just a kitchen diner and a lounge)If it has two bedrooms you can have a lodger. My son did exactly that.
NopeIf it has two bedrooms you can have a lodger. My son did exactly that.
I think with the huge lack of rental properties this is wishful thinking. I know of landlords putting properties up for rent getting as many as 80 in just a couple of hours of advertising them.
The reality is probably higher rents, not lower.
Because Brexit has very little to do with, apart from pushing wages, especially for low earners.How very strange that he doesn't mention Brexit!
We will know effect of Brexit (and our particular mix of energy provision) when the official August inflation comes out.Because Brexit has very little to do with, apart from pushing wages, especially for low earners.
Unless Brexit is also the major cause of inflation in the EU, the US, and most of the rest of the world. I would not put it past rejoiners to claim that.
All you can do is compare countries for whom the only difference is BrexitI think it is very difficult to know the economic effect from Brexit due to cov-id, it was too close to Brexit to understand.
The fall in exchange rate has helped some manufacturers to grow.
If you are going to start introducing special cases then you can "prove" any argument you like.Nope
BUT HERE'S THE KICKER
The only bathroom and toilet were over the kitchen and had to be reached via the back bedroom.
Sorry, I may have misunderstood, are you saying there is any chance whatsoever that Brexit has caused as much damage to our economy as shutting much of the economy down for (to a greater or lesser extent) up to two years ?I think it is very difficult to know the economic effect from Brexit due to cov-id, it was too close to Brexit to understand.
The fall in exchange rate has helped some manufacturers to grow.
There is no one answer to this. Economics is a complex beast with thousands of moving parts the effects of which may not have an effect for decades.Sorry, I may have misunderstood, are you saying there is any chance whatsoever that Brexit has caused as much damage to our economy as shutting much of the economy down for (to a greater or lesser extent) up to two years ?
And I talk as a Remainer.
It goes along with the "must have" the latest phone, Tv etc. I sometimes wonder if people actually had a pile of cash in front of them and then dolled if out to all those items they had on credit or subscription would they then think twice, its almost magically the money just disappears from their bank by direct debit and no further thought appears to be given.It has been extremely easy to obtain credit over the last 40 odd years, and thus be indebted.
IMO Its serfdom by stealth. debt is just modern enslavement. We dont work the land, we make the payments instead. The only advantage over serfdom that I can see is that at least those in debt have the illusion of freedom.
Anyone looking in would think we willingly succumb to this nonsense.
I was talking to one of my sons friends this week, has been fortunate enough to get on the property ladder with help to buy, so thats one loan to our government hanging over his his head,
In reply to :There is no one answer to this. Economics is a complex beast with thousands of moving parts the effects of which may not have an effect for decades.
Nobody can say with any certainty the root cause of any fluctuation or change.
No it is not - there are many 2 bedroom houses where you can not take in a lodger - that is reflected in the asking price. At the time i bought the house, i got what I could get and could not have had a lodger. I suspect that is the same with many first time buyers today - to get a place big enough to take in a lodger would require too big a mortgage to be able to get it.If you are going to start introducing special cases then you can "prove" any argument you like.
Your original general statement is still wrong.
And this is my problem with contactless payment - i think it is yet another thing that makes people spend more than they would of if they actually had to count out the tenners and think how many hours work it took to create that moneyIt goes along with the "must have" the latest phone, Tv etc. I sometimes wonder if people actually had a pile of cash in front of them and then dolled if out to all those items they had on credit or subscription would they then think twice, its almost magically the money just disappears from their bank by direct debit and no further thought appears to be given.
I was talking to one of my sons friends this week, has been fortunate enough to get on the property ladder with help to buy, so thats one loan to our government hanging over his his head, then we have car, phone, gym membership, monthly subscription to cinema another to a locally attraction, Sky, Netflix, Amazon Prime the list seemed never ending. Asked if he was saving for a rainy day he replied whats the point. He's not in a financially stable or wonderful employment but I am sure he's just one of many. I find it quite mind boggling.
I think online shopping has a part to play. You can make an expensive purchase in minutes. Multiple expensive purchases, come to that. Lots of small impulse purchases.And this is my problem with contactless payment - i think it is yet another thing that makes people spend more than they would of if they actually had to count out the tenners and think how many hours work it took to create that money
Definitely. People have much less resistance to spending £10/month than they do to spending £120/year or £500 over four years.It goes along with the "must have" the latest phone, Tv etc. I sometimes wonder if people actually had a pile of cash in front of them and then dolled if out to all those items they had on credit or subscription would they then think twice, i
I think online shopping has a part to play. You can make an expensive purchase in minutes. Multiple expensive purchases, come to that. Lots of small impulse purchases.
Definitely. People have much less resistance to spending £10/month than they do to spending £120/year or £500 over four years.
Subscriptions are the new hire purchase.