andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2010-01-08 03:35 pm
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Two numbers I would like to see
1) Average age of first-time home buyers as a graph covering the last 50 years.
2) Average monthly mortgage repayment over a similar time period - adjusted for inflation. Because this would adjust (somewhat) for house prices going up while interest rates are low.
Between them these would tell us something about the affordability of housing over a long period.
2) Average monthly mortgage repayment over a similar time period - adjusted for inflation. Because this would adjust (somewhat) for house prices going up while interest rates are low.
Between them these would tell us something about the affordability of housing over a long period.
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(Doesn't answer all your questions, but has a bit of info and might have links to more answers)
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"Affordability for potential first-time buyers has improved substantially over the past two years and mortgage payments in relation to earnings are currently significantly below the average during the past 25 years," said Martin Ellis, housing economist at Halifax.
is particularly interesting, because it contradicts what
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I think though that by going back 50 years you would skew your figures unrealistically, since the very idea of owning your own home (for the non-aristos) is a comparatively new thing, and my undestanding is very much that pre 1979 in the cities in particular people just didn't bother to own their own homes - renting throughout one's whole life was normal.
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Good point about the 50s/60s. My parents bought in 1970 - and I know that at that point it was the same cost to buy as to rent where they were. But I know it varies up and down. When I first bought in Edinburgh it was cheaper to buy my flat than the rent I'd been paying, but it was a pretty bad area I was moving into.
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/3324876/Top-up-fees-will-raise-average-age-of-first-time-buyers-to-40.html
http://www.yourmortgage.co.uk/showPage.html?page=3625183
An interesting (in parts) messageboard thread here which has a list up to 2005 (although read around it) and a lot of links:
http://www.economicsuk.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=49&start=0
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The stats, on the other hand, are fantastic - see latest post, which confirms that the trend from 2005 onwards makes mortgages much more expensive. Sadly, I couldn't find stats for older than that yet. Still digging though!
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Another issue, by the way, from those days was that building societies were much more cautious about allocating mortgages - for example we were advised to set up building society accounts as teenagers, because long term account holders were more likely to get mortgages when they needed them in their twenties. The mortgages were more affordable, but harder to gain.
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I think the second half of this statement is certainly true, but how sure are you about the first half, and how are you defining middle class - band B or band C1? I'd be surprised to find hear that a majority of social class band C1 owned property in the seventies. This nice wee essay seems to have pulled out some info suggesting that I'm right in this assumption, particularly given that economic differences between individuals are more polarised now than they were then.
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I think the biggest change under Thatcher was to remove the possibility of living a quiet respectable life like that on a fairly low income.
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The nationwide / halifax indexes only include houses that require mortgages so exclude lots of investment buys, and that cash buyers generally get better prices. However, they do lead the LR/FT index by a few months so general trends are picked up there first.
Nationwide / Halifax currently differ over the last 12 months by a huge margin - NW is up 6%ish, H only 2%ish. A 2% rise is roughly matching the rate of inflation so isn't a rise at all in real terms.
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This is because first time buyer means someone buying a house who doesn't have a house to sell as part of a transaction. Should you sell your house and move into a rented house, then buy a house you become a first time buyer, you get a better price on the sale because there's no chain, and a better price on the purchase because there is no chain there either.
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But so long as we're comparing like for like it's still useful.