Real EstateUK

Home ownership cause of inter-generational strife, says TRF

Home ownership

The deposit required to get onto the property ladder has tripled in real terms over the past 20 years

The distribution of home ownership across different generations has been a cause of strife, according to a think-tank.

The Resolution Foundation’s latest report says the costs of buying a typical first-time property with a mortgage have increased by two-thirds over the past half-century, with those born in the late 1980s experiencing the highest costs of all, as falling interest payments have failed to offset rapidly rising house prices.

The report notes that although typical first-time buyers from the baby boomer generation were hard-hit by sky high interest rates, young people today have to contend with higher house prices than previous generations, as well as tighter credit conditions than in the 2000s.

The report claims that with interest rates staying above 10 per cent throughout the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s, FTBs paid a significant amount of interest on their first-time property during this period.

But while millennials today have experienced a favourable interest rate environment, they have been hit instead by record house prices and tighter lending requirements on the part of banks and building societies.

The deposit required to get onto the property ladder has tripled in real terms over the past 20 years, from just short of £11,000 in 2000, to £33,000 in 2020.

It adds that the vast majority of this increase occurred in the years running up to the financial crisis – from £140,000 in 2000, to just under £250,000 in 2007.

The Foundation says that millennials today are struggling to get onto the property ladder in the first place.

Finally, the report notes that while the cost barriers to first-time property ownership are greater today than ever before, the benefits of home-ownership are also greater than ever. Young millennials are set to accrue more housing wealth in the form of their first property (£300,000) than any previous cohort of homeowners.

The foundation’s research director, Lindsay Judge, says: The UK property market has long been a source of intergenerational strife. Baby boomers lament the 10 per cent-plus interest rates when they first bought, while record house prices have pulled the property ladder away completely from many millennials.

She says: When you bring together all the costs associated with first-time home ownership, the lifetime costs of those properties have increased by two-thirds since the 1970s, and millennials have got the rawest deal of any generation.

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed by our writers are their own and do not represent the views of Invest for Property. The information provided on Invest for Property is intended for informational purposes only. Invest for Property is not liable for any financial losses incurred. Conduct your own research by contacting financial experts before making any investment decisions.

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