tabascoboy wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 3:58 pm
Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 3:52 pm
Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 12:14 pm
1) How's that been working out so far? Say........... since 1990? Suggest you read this because even the BofE says you are wrong
https://positivemoney.org/2019/09/bank- ... se-prices/
2) Remind me how many 1st time buyers could afford to buy a flat, near a train station that gets you into the Smoke in 40 mins?
Well we haven't built enough houses since 1990 and so the point is moot. If housebuilding kept up with demand then it would be a different picture.
I guarantee that in almost every town with a 40 minute rail connection into London you could build 100 3/4 bed homes.
If you did that the price of a 3/4 bed house would fall. This is fairly straight forward.
Apparently the last thing that homeowners want is for the value of their own home to fall, however. How do you balance a sensible "readjustment" of falling prices against the fear of negative equity?
I understand the two aren't mutually dependent but we seem to have driven ourselves into a corner where a home is an "investment asset".
There are winners and losers to the property market, whatever happens to prices, and I don't blame homeowners for not wanting the value of their house to fall. Similarly though I can't be blamed for hoping they crash through the fucking floor in much the same way I'd be hoping they soared if I owned one.
That said, the economic consequences of pricing a huge amount of people out of the housing market already (I would argue) outweigh the potential fall in value. This is before we start looking at the delays in starting families, reduction of ability to start businesses etc that comes from this.
Negative equity is shitty. However at the end of the day, assuming they can keep up the mortgage payments
they still get to have a house, just so do lots of others as well.
I think the policy option that creates the fewest losers that can legitimately feel hard done by is by aggressively targeting BTL, which no doubt distorts the market.
Would find the link if I could be bothered but once you account for rental costs Londoners have lower purchasing potential than almost any other region of the UK. So what, in effect you're getting is the additional productivity of London and the SE skimmed off to people who are not productively earning it and have less of a propensity to actually spend the money.
My landlady is lovely, but she retired at 55 and my partner & I's work funds her retirement. I can't be expected to be delighted about that.
BTL landlords will be disproportionately owner occupiers so as losers go from any change in housing policy it has the least human cost.