Talk
to many Mid Sussex 20 something’s, where home ownership has looked but a vague
dream, many of them have been vexatious towards the Baby Boomer generation and
their pushover ‘easy go lucky’ walk through life; jealous of their free university
education with grants, their eye watering property windfalls, their golden
final salary pensions and their free bus passes.
If
you had bought a property in Burgess Hill for example, say for £18,000 in first
quarter of 1977, today it would be worth £395,589, a windfall increase of 2097.7%.
But
to blame the 60 and 70 year olds of Mid Sussex for that sort of rise seems a
little unfair, with the value of the homes rising like rocket, I don't believe
they can be censured or made liable for that. A few weeks ago, I discussed in
my blog the number of people in the Mid Sussex who have two or more spare
bedrooms (meaning they are under-occupying the house). I see many mature
members of Mid Sussex society, rattling around in large 4/5 bed houses where
the kids have flown the nest years ago; but should they be blamed?
We
are all just human, and the mature members of UK society have just reacted to
the inducements of our property and tax system. The mature generations who
joined the property market party in the 1970’s and 1980’s were able to take
out huge mortgages, protected in the knowledge that inflation would
corrode the real value of the mortgage, while wage gains would boost their ability
to repay.
Neither
do I directly blame the multitude of Mid Sussex buy to let landlords, buying up
their 10th or 11th property to add to their buy to let empire. They too, are humbly
reacting to the peculiar historic inducements of the UK property market.
So,
who is to blame?
Well, hyperinflation
in the 1970’s meant the real value of people’s mortgages was whipped out (as
mentioned above). Margaret Thatcher and Nigel Lawson are also good people to
blame with Maggie selling off millions of council houses and Nigel Lawson’s
delayed ending of the MIRAS tax relief in 1987; meaning he too can get his share
of indignation. The Blair/Brown combo doubled stamp duty in 1997 and again in
2000, which, as a tax on property transactions, precludes a more
efficient distribution of the current housing stock. The Government has
had plenty of opportunity to change the draconian stamp duty rules to
incentivise those mature Mid Sussex house movers to downsize.
However,
I have started to see over the last few years a change in Government policy
towards housing. The new breed of Mid Sussex buy to let landlords that have
come about since the Millennium, have had their wings clipped over the last
couple of years, with the introduction of new tax rules (meaning it is slightly
more difficult to make money out of property unless you have all the national
information and Mid Sussex property trends to hand).
One side of the argument is that 380
homes are being bought up by buy to let landlords each year in the Mid Sussex
District Council area when otherwise they might have become available to other
buyers, the other side of the argument is the current national average deposit
is £51,800, which is, by far, the greatest barrier to those wanting to buy
their first home. Those homes bought by local buy to let landlords are not left
idle, as they equate to 2,659 of new homes for local people, most of whom who
see renting as a better option because of the choice, the simplicity and the
flexibility which renting brings.
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