‘An Englishman’s Home is his Castle’ is the phrase that was coined in Victorian times as the UK has a reputation for being a country of home owners... but the truth could be further from the point, because in a league of the top 46 economic nations of the world, where owning your property is permissible, the UK is only ranked no.37.
As I
mentioned a couple of weeks ago, at the end of the First World War, 77% of people
rented their home (the vast majority renting from a private landlord as Council
Housing was still very much in its infancy). Homeownership rose very slowly in
the 1920’s and started to grow as the economy grew after the Great Depression.
However, after the Luftwaffe had flattened huge swathes of housing in the early
40’s, the priority was to get people into clean and decent accommodation .. so
Local Authority’s (Councils) took up the baton and they built large council estates
in the 1950’s and 1960’s.
As the UK economy got back on its
feet in the middle part of the 20th Century and wages rose, people
decided they wanted to own their own home instead of renting and throughout the post war decades,
it became easier to secure a mortgage. Interestingly, by 1977, 61.6% of 30 to
34 year olds were owner occupiers with a mortgage compared to 8.7% of 30 to 34
year olds being in private rented accommodation (the remaining either being in council housing or living with friends or
family). Ten years later, in 1987, we saw some significant growth in
homeownership, as 68.2% of 30 to 34 year olds had a mortgage and only 4.6% of
people privately rented. A decade later and there wasn’t much change as, in
1997, the homeownership figure was 68.3% but private renting had jumped to
12.1% in the same 30 to 34 year old age group.
Move on
another ten years to the 2007 figures, and this showed a slight drop in
homeownership to 65.8% but renting had continued to increase to 18.7% (in the
30 to 34 year old age group). The latest set of figures is for 2014, and only
47.2% of 30 to 34 year olds had a mortgage and an eye watering 33.4% of 30 to
34 year olds privately rent.
When we look
at the Northampton figures of homeownership, looking back to 1991, 65.99% of Northampton
households were owned by the homeowner, whilst 9.01% of Northampton households
were privately rented, whilst the 2011 census showed home ownership in Northampton
had dropped to 60.81% and private rented had increased to 18.19%. Much of the
recent rise in the occurrence of private renting in Northampton since the turn
of the Millennium is not because property has become more expensive, but the
fact these 30 somethings haven’t got
a council house to move into (because they were all sold off) – so they have to
rent. The selling of council housing in the 1980’s (a subject I have talked
about in a previous article in the Northampton Property Market Blog) artificially
grew homeownership in the 1980’s, but as these people have got older, the
younger generation didn’t have the same opportunity to buy their council house
in the 1990’s, 2000’s or 2010’s. That is why, unless the council start building
council houses by the acre, and hundreds of acres, private renting will
continue to grow in Northampton.
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