Thursday 5 September 2013

Almost 2 Million UK Would Be Homeowners Can’t Get on Property Ladder


New research suggests that almost two million would be homeowners in the UK, mostly families, can't get on the property ladder because they can't afford to save for the deposit needed, according to this September 4th, 2013 recent article by the Property Wire.

According to housing charity Shelter around 1.8 million families face a life time of renting a home with three quarter priced out of the market and even with the government’s flagship Help to Buy scheme some 78% are unable to afford the repayments on a family sized home.

In contrast, the report finds that mortgage repayments on a shared ownership home would be affordable for 95% of families on low or middle incomes.

The charity is calling for a major new house building programme of shared ownership homes to revolutionise ownership for what is describes as ‘forgotten families’. This would allow families to find an affordable home of their own, and provide a real alternative to the confusing postcode lottery of existing small scale schemes, or the overheated private rental market.

The report says that investing £12 billion, less than 1% of GDP, could build 600,000 new shared ownership homes which would be enough to give almost half of England’s private renting families the chance to own their own home. 

‘We need to see a new generation of shared ownership for the ordinary families priced out of home ownership. The reality is that soaring house prices mean that the traditional market is no longer working for ordinary people,’ said Kay Boycott, director of campaigns and policy at Shelter.

‘Building the new shared ownership homes we desperately need is the only way to give thousands of families a stake in the stable home they want at a price they can afford,’ she added.

But the government says it is doing more to help families onto the housing ladder. As well as schemes like Help to Buy and Funding for Lending, both credited with boosting the number of first time buyers, it points to the fact that it has also launched a new scheme to bring back empty homes into the housing stock.

It is working with the public and private sector through the National Empty Homes Loan Fund (NEHLF) to give borrowers access to a secured loan at a fixed 5% interest to renovate some of the 710,000 empty homes in England.

A joint £3 million initiative has been launched with the charity Empty Homes, the Ecology Building Society and 39 participating local authorities to help home owners who cannot afford to bring the property up to a useable standard.

The Ecology Building Society, a specialist mortgage lender that supports sustainable communities, said that it should provide funding for hundreds of properties and is available to individuals aged 18 and over who own a property that has been empty for six months or more. 

‘We know that many homes are empty because it is difficult for owners to raise the money that is required to bring them back up to a habitable standard. This initiative will kick start efforts to tackle this. This scheme is a first in England and is a great example of central government working together with the public and private sector to try and reduce the number of empty homes in the UK,’ said David Ireland, chief executive of Empty Homes.

Paul Ellis, chief executive of the Ecology Building Society, said that at a time when there is increasing demand for homes but an acute lack of supply it makes sense to bring new life to existing but neglected properties.



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