I was reading the Sunday Papers and when reading the financial pages, it was announced the UK inflation had increased to its highest level in a year. Inflation, as calculated by the Government’s Consumer Prices Index, rose by 0.3% over the last 12 months. The report said it had risen to the those ‘heady’ levels by smaller falls in supermarket and petrol prices than a year ago. If you recall, in early 2015, we had deflation where prices were dropping!
So what does this
mean for the Northampton property market ... especially the tenants?
Back in November, the Office of National
Statistics stated average wages only rose by 1.8% year on year, so when
adjusted for inflation, Northampton people are 1.5% better off in ‘real’
terms. Great news for homeowners, as
their mortgage rates are at their lowest ever levels and their spending power
is increasing, but the news is not so good for tenants.
The
average rent that Northampton tenants have to pay for their Private Rental
Properties in Northampton (i.e. not
housing association or council tenants) rose by 2.4% throughout 2015,
eating into most of the growth. 2015
wasn’t a one off either. In 2014, rents
in Northampton rose by 1.3% (where salaries only rose by only 0.2%) However, it’s
not all bad news for Northampton tenants, because in 2013 rents rose by 1.0%, (but
salaries rose by 2.2%).
… and it must
be noted, the private rents Northampton tenants have had to pay for a Northampton
property since 2005 are only 15.0% higher, not even keeping up with inflation,
which over the same time frame, rose at 27.8% (although salaries were only 22.3%
higher over the same time period).
More and more,
talking to 20 and 30 somethings who
rent – it’s a choice. Gone are the days
where owning your own property was a guaranteed path to wealth, affluence and
prosperity.
I know I keep mentioning Europe, but
some of the highest levels of home ownership are in Romania at 96.1%, Hungary
at 88.2% and Latvia at 80.9% (none of them European economic dynamos) and even
West European countries like Spain at 78.8% and Greece at 74% (and we know both
of those countries are on their knees, riddled with national debt and massive
youth unemployment).
At the other
end of the scale, whilst we in the UK stand at 64.8% homeownership, in Europe’s
powerhouses, only 52.5% of Germans own a home and only 44% of Swiss people are
homeowners. Looks like eating chocolate,
sauerkraut, renting and good economic performance go hand in hand. Yet, joking aside, home ownership has not always
been the rule in the UK. In 1918, only 23% of people were homeowners,
with no council housing, meaning in fact, 77% were tenants.
Tenants have a choice, the flexibility
to move and they don’t have massive bills when the boiler blows up, it’s a
choice. Northampton rents are growing,
but not as much as incomes. To buy or
not to buy is an enormously difficult decision.
So buying a Northampton home is a
dream for the majority of the 20 and 30 something’s of Northampton have, it
might not leave them better off in the long run and it isn’t necessarily the
best option for everyone.
That is why,
demand for renting is only going in one direction – upwards.
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