Lucy Alexander
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The difficulty of getting a first foothold on the housing ladder has left Anna Sandall, a trainee clinical psychologist, renting for the past two years.
Ms Sandall, 25, left home two years ago and has been renting in Balham, southwest London, in a shared house with her boyfriend Simon, also 25, an engineer. She earns £26,000 a year and together the couple could afford a one-bedroom flat costing a maximum of £250,000. The average price paid by a first-time buyer in London is £288,615.
“There is no way I can afford to buy on my own, so this summer we started looking for a place together,” Ms Sandall said. “We soon realised it was going to take us longer than we thought. After looking in estate agents’ windows we decided it wasn’t worth even going to look at any flats because they were all too expensive.”
Ms Sandall said that she was deterred not only by the unaffordably high prices but also by the fear of trying to buy at the top of the market.
“It just feels like the worst time to be looking to buy. The market is too unstable, so we prefer to wait for a bit and see if prices and interest rates drop next year. We hope that they will, and perhaps within 12 months we will have the opportunity to try to move.
“I have looked in loads of estate agents’ windows, explored different areas to see what prices are like and searched online, with no luck,” Ms Sandell said. “I suppose I have to accept the situation because I’ve made my choice – I don’t have to live in London.”
Ms Sandall said that some friends and colleagues had opted to buy through the Government’s shared-ownership scheme. The plan, which is available only to key workers such as teachers and NHS staff, allows them to purchase a percentage of a property and rent the rest from the Government, with the option of increasing the share over time and eventually taking on the full mortgage.
“I’ve looked at shared ownership but I’d rather do this on my own without government help,” she said. “I don’t know anyone my age who’s been able to buy without help from their parents, even if they have really well-paid jobs.”
Where once parents would have been free of any financial burden once their children finished university, now they are expected to contribute thousands of pounds to help their offspring to buy their first home.
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Ms Sandall is only 25. There are many 10 years older who have put off starting a family because one salary can not even pay the rent on a one bedroom flat, yet alone two salaries covering a mortgage on a two bedder.
Steve, London,
What has this silly irresponsible government done?? A whole generation has been disabled by this mismanaged economy.
ruth watton, west midlands, England
Why not emigrate to Switzerland or Germany, the really in-thing there is know how to get an affordable rented flat as 80-90% of all people rent. There, it's just plain normal. Here, the assumption that everybody can afford their own house is a postwar setup without much of a tradition, but it's over and all those on normal jobs better get used to it.
The illusion of homeownership serves its purpose though. It masks the sharpest wealth inequality in Western Europe. Under new labour, inequality has gotten worse rather than better.
With respect to housing, the problem in my view is not so much that people cannot afford to buy, but that they cannot afford to rent at a reasonable level, partly due the selling out of council property. Partly this is to do with the terraced house - it is inefficient, expensive and outdated. And partly this is a consequence of the low tax regime: cutting inheritance tax means that fewer property will have to be sold further down the line and so on.
Fred Caprivi, Manchester,
Arn't the couple described here a little young to be buying a place of their own? There is the whole wide world to experience before you settle down. I bought my first place at thirty six after living on three continents.
Arnold Ward, Weybridge, Surrey, UK
Presumably as Ms Sandall lives in Balham,then that is the area where she is looking to buy.
A one bedroom flat for pounds 250000 repeat 250000! I wonder if our political friends and B of E people really realise how little one gets for getting into debt for the rest of ones life. Presumably Ms Sandall would pay around pounds 300000 if she wanted the luxury of a second bedroom!
There are thousands like her and it is truly scarey. They owe there situation to a blinkered government thinking ever increasing house prices was the goose with the golden egg, and a B of E refusing to cut down ages ago on easy credit and sticking with excessively low interest rates.
I would recommend Ms Sandall to at least investigate leaving the UK to work overseas with her skills. Sadly, England offers little to "ordinary" decent people trying to build their lives. The financial disincentives are too great.
nic, royan, france
If enough people emigrated North of Watford to cheaper areas then London will be left with a glut of properties that nobody can sell through lack of buyers thus putting a stop to stupid London property prices.
Louis Blanc, Walsall, UK