So, all cards up in the air! The general election wasn’t exactly the
landslide that was predicted when it was first called, which could make the
Brexit negotiations due to start next week even more difficult. As it currently stands, by not assuring the rights of EU citizens in the UK, Theresa May has
squandered an opportunity to give peace of mind to our EU co-workers working
and living in Mid Sussex (and the rest of the UK). No.10 Downing Street’s point of
view is that in promising the rights of EU citizens in the UK, it will postpone
the same guarantee to the 1.5 million UK citizens living in the other nations
of the EU.
Putting
aside the politics for one second, the simple fact is now Article 50 has been
triggered, we have two years to make a deal with the EU; otherwise it will be a
‘hard Brexit’. Now you might not think a hard Brexit will affect you in your
home in Mid Sussex, but nothing could be further from the truth.
Of
the 137,291 people who are resident in the Mid Sussex District Council area, 124,388
were born in the UK, 3,253 were born in EU countries from West Europe and 996
were born in EU countries from the former Soviet States in East Europe (the
rest coming from other countries around the world).
The
rights of these EU citizens living in the Mid Sussex area are not guaranteed
and will now be part of the negotiation with Europe. It is true a lot of our EU
next door neighbours in Mid Sussex will have acquired rights relating to the
right to live, to work, to own a business, to possess a property, the right to
access health and education services and the right to remain in a UK after
retirement, yet those acquired rights are up for negotiation in the next two
years.
So,
what would a hard Brexit do to the Mid Sussex property market?
Well
a hard Brexit could mean the nuclear option when it came to the Mid Sussex
housing market. It could mean that every EU citizen would have to leave the UK.
In
the Mid Sussex District area, 2,372 of the 3,253 Western European EU citizens
own their own home and (so they would all need to be sold) and 622 of the 996 Eastern
European EU citizens rent a property, so again all those rental properties
would all come on the market at the same time.
Hard
Brexit and mass EU Migration would mean c. 1,400 properties being dumped onto
the housing market in a short period of time, meaning there would be a massive
drop in Mid Sussex property values and rents, causing negative equity for
thousands of Mid Sussex homeowners and many buy-to-let landlords would be out
of pocket.
While
there is no certainty as to what the future will hold, both UK expats in the EU
and EU citizens in the UK rights will no longer be guaranteed and will be
subject to bilateral renegotiation.
All
I ask is that the politicians are sensible with each other in the negotiations.
A lot of the success of the Mid Sussex (and UK) property market has been built
on high levels of homeownership and more recently in the last 10/15 years, a
growth of the rental sector with lots of demand from Eastern Europeans coming
to Mid Sussex (and the surrounding area) to get work and provide for their
families. Many Mid Sussex people have invested their life savings into buying a
buy to let property.
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