With
Mid Sussex youngsters not able to buy their own property, my research would
suggests the progressively important role the private rented sector has been
playing in housing people in need of a roof over their head, especially at a
time of increasing affordability problems for first time buyers and growing
difficulties faced by social housing providers (local authorities and housing
associations) in their ability to secure funding from Westminster and then
compete against the likes of the Croudace and Crest Nicholson’s of this world
to buy highly priced building land.
Renting
isn’t like it was in the 1960’s and 70’s, where tenants couldn’t wait to leave
their rack-rent landlords, charging sky-high rents for properties with Second
World War wood chip wallpaper, no central heating and drafty windows. Since
1997 with the introduction of buy to let mortgages and a new breed of Mid
Sussex landlord, the private rented sector in Mid Sussex has offered increasingly
high quality accommodation for younger Mid Sussex households.
So
whilst I knew in my own mind that the type and class of tenant has improved
over the last 20 years, I had nothing to back that up; until now. According to
some detailed statistics from Durham University just released, for the Mid
Sussex District Council area, the current situation regarding social status of
tenants shows some very interesting points. Using the well-known Demographic
ABC1 grade classifications which refers to the social grade definitions (which
describe, measure and classify people of different social grade and income and
earnings levels, for market research, social commentary, lifestyle statistics,
and statistical research and analysis) this is what I found out.
Of
the 11,201 tenants who live in a private rented property in the Mid Sussex
District Council area, 24.62% (or 2,758) of those tenants are classified in the
AB category (AB
Category being Higher and intermediate managerial / administrative /
professional occupations), compared to 34.49% owner occupiers who
own their property without a mortgage or 4.49% who rent their property from the
local authority. Fascinating don’t you think?
Looking
at the C1’s (C1’s
being the Supervisory, clerical and junior managerial / administrative /
professional occupations), of the already mentioned 11,201 tenants
in the area, an impressive 3,952 of them are considered to be in the C1
category (or 35.28%). Again, when compared with the owner occupiers who own
their property without a mortgage, that figure stands at 35.34% and 21.64% who
rent their property from the local authority. So, if we use the
conventional measurements recorded by the white-collar “ABC1” i.e. middle
class, this means 59.91% of tenants are considered middle class in Mid Sussex.
I
could go through all of the social categories through to ‘E’, but I humbly
don’t want to bore you with too many numbers. The fact is that private tenants
are moving up the social ladder and whilst back in the 1960’s and 70’s, the
private rented sector in Mid Sussex (and the rest of the UK) has customarily
been viewed as a temporary tenure for 20
somethings before they bought a property, the increase in renting
in Mid Sussex, which I have talked about many times in the Mid Sussex Property
Market Blog may be a reflection of increasing difficulty for this group in
accessing other tenures, but may also be a reflection that people nowadays
choose to rent long term instead?
Mid
Sussex Landlords need to be aware that tenants now demand more from their
properties, the agent and their landlord and whilst affordability for
first-time buyers and tighter controls on lending may mean that potential
first-time buyers are in the private rented sector for longer, they will still
pay ‘top dollar’ rent for a ‘top dollar’ property.
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