As I mentioned in a previous article,
the average house price in Mid Sussex is 12.46 times the average annual Mid
Sussex salary. This is higher than the last peak of 2008, when the ratio was 9.98.
A number of City commentators anticipated that in the ambiguity that trailed
the Brexit vote, UK (and hence Mid Sussex) property prices might drop like a
stone. The point is – they haven’t.
Now it’s true the market for Mid
Sussex swankiest and poshest properties looks a little fragile (although they
are selling if they are realistically priced) and overall, Mid Sussex property price
growth has slowed, but the lower to middle Mid Sussex property market appears to
be quite strong.
Even though we
are not anywhere near the post credit crunch (2008 and 2009) low levels of
property sales, the torpor of the Mid Sussex housing market following the 2016
Brexit vote has seen the number of property sales in Mid Sussex local authority
area level off to what appears to be the start of a new long term trend
(compared the Noughties).
Interestingly, it
was the 1980’s that saw the highest levels of people moving home. Nationally,
everyone was moving on average every decade. Even though it was during the Labour
administration of the late 1970’s where the right to buy one’s council house
started, it was the Housing Act of 1980 that that really got council tenants
moving, as Thatcher’s Tory government financially encouraged council tenants to
buy their council-rented homes, for which countless then sold them on for a
profit and moved elsewhere. The housing market was awash with money as banks were
allowed to offer mortgages as well as the existing building societies, meaning
it made it simpler for Brits to borrow even more money on mortgages and to climb
up the housing ladder.
But coming back
to today, looking at the property sales figures in Mid Sussex since 2010/11, a
new trend of number of property sales appears to have started. Interestingly,
this has been mirrored nationally. The reasons behind this are complex, but a
good place to start is the growth rate of real UK household disposable income,
which has fallen from 5.01% a year in 2000 to 1.68% in 2016. Also, things have deteriorated
since the country voted to leave the EU as consumer price inflation has risen
to 2.7% per annum, meaning inflation has eaten away at the real value of wages
(as they have only grown by 1.1% in the same time frame).
With meagre real income
growth, it has become more difficult for homeowners to accumulate the savings needed
to climb up the housing ladder as the level of saving has also dropped from
4.26% of household income to -1.11% (i.e.
people are eating into their savings).
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