Why Are Houses Unaffordable in Britain? - The Housing Crisis Explained - TLDR News

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  • Опубликовано: 20 май 2024
  • Solving the Housing Crisis: • How to Solve the Housi...
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    Britain is currently going through a housing crisis, with property becoming increasingly unaffordable for many people. So in this video, we're going to discuss the current situation, why housings becoming so unaffordable and what can be done about it.
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @pareshpanchal91
    @pareshpanchal91 2 года назад +302

    £104 pound for a house is cheap! 1:26

    • @trippymchippy8586
      @trippymchippy8586 2 года назад +10

      Gimme two! ;)

    • @scotandiamapping4549
      @scotandiamapping4549 2 года назад +5

      I think he me- oh it's a joke

    • @jamesmash3927
      @jamesmash3927 2 года назад +11

      bugger I paid too way too much for mine.

    • @BIGDZ8346
      @BIGDZ8346 2 года назад +9

      @@trippymchippy8586 "Gimme 15 motherfucker!" Big Smoke

    • @Cavey2345
      @Cavey2345 2 года назад +24

      At 1:44 the house costs £10k more than advertised on the sign! They really did rush this one out...

  • @paulpaul9800
    @paulpaul9800 2 года назад +365

    "How many crises do you have?"
    Britain : Yes

    • @alexreeves3817
      @alexreeves3817 2 года назад +20

      "is it a bug or a feature of your system"
      Britain: Yes

    • @Jay_Johnson
      @Jay_Johnson 2 года назад +1

      @@alexreeves3817 16x the median income

    • @stickman6217
      @stickman6217 2 года назад

      And this is the true reason you'll never own a house.

    • @Afterthoughtbtw
      @Afterthoughtbtw 2 года назад +5

      One of the _crises_ is clearly a crisis in spelling. ;)

    • @Qefx
      @Qefx 2 года назад +1

      Brexit was the best idea ever. At least all those people wont be able to move out of Britain! (Those landlords and huge hedge funds probably)

  • @ElliHoy
    @ElliHoy 2 года назад +265

    Its no accident that the UK has too few houses, it makes everyone wealthy apart from those stuck renting.

    • @henryhunter1773
      @henryhunter1773 2 года назад +6

      I agree. 👍

    • @prathamlandge7219
      @prathamlandge7219 2 года назад +3

      true

    • @thomasowen1720
      @thomasowen1720 2 года назад +15

      The U.K. doesn’t have too few houses that’s a lie it’s because of cheap credit that’s why no one can afford a house.

    • @henryhunter1773
      @henryhunter1773 2 года назад

      @@thomasowen1720 yes.

    • @Grim_Beard
      @Grim_Beard 2 года назад +19

      It doesn't make homeowners wealthy, though, they just _feel_ wealthier when they see house prices going up. However, to get that money they'd have to sell their house, which they need to live in. It makes _landlords_ wealthier, and that's about it.
      It's perhaps worth noting that a _lot_ of Tory MPs are landlords. Coincidentally, they also voted down a bill that would require landlords to ensure that the properties they rent out are fit for human habitation.

  • @elliotspencer2648
    @elliotspencer2648 2 года назад +36

    I live in a large city and the amount of empty and unused properties is unreal, this should be made illegal.

    • @jm-je4tl
      @jm-je4tl 2 года назад +1

      Which city?

    • @elliotspencer2648
      @elliotspencer2648 2 года назад +9

      @@jm-je4tl i live in birmingham and there are parts of 'brum' with properties that have been empty for ages yet there are homeless people living on the streets.

    • @jansherkhan7276
      @jansherkhan7276 10 месяцев назад

      @@elliotspencer2648 You talking about Selly oak. There are about 10 properties on each street there for let, but lying empty

  • @Wamboland
    @Wamboland 2 года назад +747

    When you are German and knows how bad the housing crisis is over here and still get referenced as a better case. It must be really horrible on the island.

    • @goblinwisdom
      @goblinwisdom 2 года назад +121

      You should take a look at the quality of the new builds, it's a joke.

    • @heisennoob6446
      @heisennoob6446 2 года назад +15

      I mean, I wouldnt say that its a good comparison. Germany has a lower number of houses in total because of our prevsilant renting culture, so a 3% rise is less than a 2% rise in the UK

    • @williamhadley549
      @williamhadley549 2 года назад +70

      Families are moving to poorer parts of the UK to buy homes, because they can't afford to live in the places they grew up in.
      Where I live in Swansea the average working family (both parents working) makes £33,000 a year. And a 3bed house will cost you about £85,000 in a bad neighborhood, £120,000 in an average neighborhood, and £180,000+ in a posh neighborhood. This is extremely good value. About as low as it gets in a city, outside Scotland.
      If you go two hours up the motorway to Bristol 1 bedroom flats start at about £120,000, and three bedroom houses are £250,000+.
      The closer you get to London, the more absurd it gets. Want to live in central London? I hope you have £500,000 for a studio apartment.

    • @joshuaparrott2458
      @joshuaparrott2458 2 года назад +23

      If you're renting for too long, you become stuck.

    • @heisennoob6446
      @heisennoob6446 2 года назад +20

      @@joshuaparrott2458 Except not, housing is not the only investment. It is even shown that you can earn more money through smart stock or ETF investments. We also have a lot more renter protection and regulation than countries in the anglo sphere and it only got bad in the biggest cities, when regulations were abolished and social housing sold in the early 2000s. Vienna is the perfect example how you can have a stable and affordable living expenses with your population being almost only renters

  • @PythonPlusPlus
    @PythonPlusPlus 2 года назад +121

    I’m living in London. Every time I go house browsing, I can only cry, because houses are generally in the 400K to 1M range. The cheapest houses are more than 10X my annual salary. Even renting is a extremely unreasonable, I have to give up about 60% of my salary on the rent alone, only for a basic tiny studio apartment.

    • @silviuchitic162
      @silviuchitic162 2 года назад +18

      yeah man. I moved up north 2 years ago. Instead of paying 650 (bills included) for a room in a share house, me and a mate pay 500 rent (around 700 with bills) for a 2 bed house. So I pay 350 and there's just us two in the house.

    • @THEREALZENFORCE
      @THEREALZENFORCE 2 года назад +3

      1M only in London ? In villages in Luxembourg houses are already 1.4M.
      And in the city between 3M to 7M average for houses depending on area of the city

    • @THEREALZENFORCE
      @THEREALZENFORCE 2 года назад +12

      1) Who forces you to live in London ?
      2) Who forces you to live in the UK ?
      Besides yourself, nobody

    • @lamayengineeringservices
      @lamayengineeringservices 2 года назад

      It's hard I hear you. Just gotta try and make more money.

    • @PythonPlusPlus
      @PythonPlusPlus 2 года назад +28

      @@THEREALZENFORCE My job is in London, and I don’t have a Visa. I only just started working as well, so I don’t really have the ability to just pack my bags and leave just yet. There is a potential that my job might become remote at some point, which would open me up to more options.

  • @PeterPete
    @PeterPete 2 года назад +36

    quote - Why Are Houses Unaffordable in Britain?
    To ensure more people rent to keep the haves having more than the have nots. The entire system needs changing!!!

  • @GG-hu9dn
    @GG-hu9dn 2 года назад +39

    "Britains housing crisis explained": GREED!!

  • @perranbritton5090
    @perranbritton5090 2 года назад +410

    I live in cornwall and locals are being priced out of the area so many second homes here that locals can no longer afford abs have to move. Or house owners kick out there local renters because it’s more profitable to make it a holiday let

    • @faves2064
      @faves2064 2 года назад +61

      There should be some protection for local residents in areas where this is happening as it's disgusting that they're being priced out of their own areas by people rich enough to buy and second house

    • @michaelwhitaker4372
      @michaelwhitaker4372 2 года назад +49

      @@faves2064 absolutely there should be. But the Conservatives are actively promoting second home buying, so unfortunately you won't be getting such policy from this government. Sader still, it looks like we no longer have an opposition focused on this issue.

    • @bongsound
      @bongsound 2 года назад +31

      As a fellow Cornishman I can confirm this is the case. I had to move away to get a well paid job and a house I could actually afford.

    • @faves2064
      @faves2064 2 года назад +27

      @@michaelwhitaker4372 it's just maddening that this is promoted when there's a housing crisis going on. Usual rich getting richer nastiness while the torys divert their voter's attention to blame foreigners and the EU

    • @JD-wf2hu
      @JD-wf2hu 2 года назад +29

      The way to address this should be council tax. Charge triple council tax on second homes.

  • @Mcleody9
    @Mcleody9 2 года назад +309

    They should lower the hurdles to do self-builds. Alot of younger people want to build their own because its cheaper. Tiny homes, biohomes etc. But when you get into the legalities its a nightmare

    • @tacosmexicanstyle7846
      @tacosmexicanstyle7846 2 года назад +46

      It’s the cost of the land that matters, the actual buildings are usually not worth much. My home - the building itself - was valued at cost at about £100k. The land is worth 15x that.

    • @jacobarcher1097
      @jacobarcher1097 2 года назад +20

      Nah the only reason I'm considering tiny homes ect is because I can't afford a proper house

    • @harambae7014
      @harambae7014 2 года назад +18

      @@tacosmexicanstyle7846 So your property is worth 1.6M? Jesus...

    • @johnjephcote7636
      @johnjephcote7636 2 года назад +17

      When one looks at the houses in Europe, there are so many individual styles, most often from self-build. In the UK (unless one has a lot of money) one has to purchas e a standard house from one of the big developers (and thank oneself for just being lucky and actually getting a property).

    • @myasaee
      @myasaee 2 года назад +8

      Exactly, you can't buy land to build on. Stuck to shop at what developers have on offer.
      All because all houses have to look the same.

  • @nojakthegemlad
    @nojakthegemlad 2 года назад +185

    Personal property is stability and freedom. This monopolisation of property by a handful of rich investors, landlords and corporations will make the average person less stable, less free and more powerless than ever before. If this goes any further, we will need a revolution, there can be no other way.

    • @sgtbilko2950
      @sgtbilko2950 2 года назад +19

      You will own nothing and be happy

    • @suserman7775
      @suserman7775 2 года назад +4

      Voting for Leftists caused this problem, and even after a revolution there will be Leftists eager to implement the same "caring" (read: stupid) policies that caused the problem in the first place.

    • @adventureaviator9702
      @adventureaviator9702 2 года назад +3

      @@suserman7775 Explain this please

    • @oneillnandie7999
      @oneillnandie7999 2 года назад +1

      @@suserman7775 We haven’t had a leftist party since 2010 and even then, how “leftist” they really were is disputable

    • @suserman7775
      @suserman7775 2 года назад +2

      @@oneillnandie7999 Doesn't matter what party the current PM is in. News media have too many citizens "believe" that moving away from Leftist ideals is "mean". So basically the problem can't be solved with common sense.
      Restructure the green belt? MEAN !
      Reduce regulation to make new housing builds more doable? MEAN !
      The Leftist philosophy, of "caring", is only about superficially showing there is care. If consequences lead to more hardship, well that's okay, we'll care about you at that time then.
      The Left is quite content with giving a man a fish, if said man promises not to learn how to fish.

  • @tokidoki3405
    @tokidoki3405 2 года назад +30

    I wasn't looking at the screen when you said the price of a house was £104 and I was like ????? until I looked up and realised it was £104k and the audio is just wrong lmao

  • @mr.mrs.d.7015
    @mr.mrs.d.7015 2 года назад +415

    You've forgot to include the problem of foreign investors buying up properties they have no intention of living in, often to launder money.

    • @tomralph8540
      @tomralph8540 2 года назад +50

      This is such a tiny, tiny percentage yet I always see Socialists bringing this up, but when health tourism or illegal immigration is brought up, you're told to shut up, as it's only a tiny minority of people who fit that bill.

    • @orgo1968
      @orgo1968 2 года назад +22

      You mean like the Brits do in other countries.

    • @Juan_Carlos2
      @Juan_Carlos2 2 года назад +4

      @@orgo1968 Exactly

    • @haroldinho9930
      @haroldinho9930 2 года назад +3

      @@tomralph8540 in America it’s really, REALLY bad. UK just doesn’t build enough houses. In America also whole neighbourhoods are built for Airbnb.

    • @dallysinghson5569
      @dallysinghson5569 2 года назад +14

      Health tourism is deceptive way to put it as UK nationals had ability to health tour other countries. Secondly, what's the fucking problem if somebody has their life saved by the NHS, we pay the NHS a relative pittance anyways and it does fairly well!
      And as for illegal immigration the clue is in the first word: ILLEGAL.
      Nice attempt at wHtabboutism

  • @tonybennett4159
    @tonybennett4159 2 года назад +223

    I'm of the older generation living in a flat long since paid off, but I'm feeling anything but smug, instead I'm very angry.
    I bought my London flat on my own when I was a primary school teacher and I was able to afford it. Now, two teachers would not be able to afford it. Along with this is the degrading of language associated with housing : every new development is "luxury", "Manhattan Style", "boutique", "designer" (particulary ridiculous as every building is designed) etc. Then we are told that in every development there must be a number of "affordable" flats. Meaningless, because a person earning the average wage has no chance whatsoever of being able to "afford" one, and even at that price, it seems that the number of "affordable" flats in a development has been allowed to shrink.
    The amount of social housing in London has dramatically fallen since my purchase, and many people who had lived in an area all their lives have been forced to relocate away from friends and support networks. It's all so unfair, but I see no chance of change because those in power are all too happy to let this continue, although they may shed crocodile tears from time to time.

    • @capri2673
      @capri2673 2 года назад +23

      I completely agree with you. I'm a homeowner only because I was fortunate enough to be young in the early 90s when it was affordable to buy one.
      I don't take any happiness from owning a home. Okay it's better than renting but it's just somewhere to live. What makes me angry is how a whole generation of people have been crushed with debt.

    • @imanepink
      @imanepink 2 года назад +9

      Nah even some people with "good" salaries ("£45K+") would still not be able to afford a home in some parts of the country which is sad.

    • @awpetersen5909
      @awpetersen5909 2 года назад

      Same development in Germany.

    • @CLhighlightsful
      @CLhighlightsful 2 года назад +3

      The result of foreign investment in the UK and also banks generating digital cash for mortgages with no back-up. In reality banks should destroy every time there is a repayment to each digitally created loan and keep interest. But they obviosuly don’t do this. This system increased the affordability of home buying in the last 30 years coupled with foreign investment. If everyone actually sold their houses and decided to take cash and move abroad, the system would break down, but they know clearly people wouldnt do this so it is a perfect place to hide inflation due to digitally generated cash. Another example is the stock market. So in summary 2-3 % pay rise you get (if that...) every year based on Retail Price Index, they should factor in this HIDDEN inflation in housing market. People now have to take mortgages as couples rather singles as they did 10-20 years ago. Granted the interest rate in 1990 was 15% and probably you had to pay similar monthly payments. They managed to offset this price increase by reducing the interest rates, but how much further can they do this ? Surely you cannot have negative interest rates. The whole system is broken and in the future we will need to have 100 year mortgages to pass affordability...

    • @Chris-jo1zr
      @Chris-jo1zr 2 года назад +1

      I worked on some developments in London, I forget where but I walked past it when I was there once, an old cinema turned into ridiculously expensive apartments, right across the road were council like flats. I believe there was a big uproar about it all and rightly so, a surprising amount of developments in London are aimed at the foreign wealthy markets.

  • @stephenhatherly226
    @stephenhatherly226 2 года назад +95

    what makes the whole thing worse is that landlords are buying up what few "affordable" houses/flats that young couples would potentially be able to afford and then renting them out way over priced.

    • @safetyladysilver8988
      @safetyladysilver8988 2 года назад

      Doesn't alter the numbers of houses tho. Just who owns or occupies.

    • @whiteninja5546
      @whiteninja5546 2 года назад

      And not repairing overtime

    • @annapachaclarke2392
      @annapachaclarke2392 2 года назад +3

      That is true, it's happening throughout Greater Manchester. The rents are ridiculous but demand is high, so we end up paying two thirds of our salaries on rent, unless you are fortunate to get somewhere, at slightly more reasonable rent! Even though 1500 is common monthly rent, that does not guarantee we won't be begging and chasing for basic maintenance work to be done. Greedy, immoral landlord and agents are aplenty!

  • @leenanorms
    @leenanorms 2 года назад +304

    Would love a solutions video!

    • @bosoerjadi2838
      @bosoerjadi2838 2 года назад +4

      Increase building social housing. Pay for it by investing (or increased targeted taxing haha) in large scale multiple housing developers. So while the crisis lasts the government gets more income through the latter to build more social housing. Eventually the ROI on these investments should go down, which means the increase in social housing has had the proper effect.

    • @buzzofftoxicblog791
      @buzzofftoxicblog791 2 года назад +2

      Easy to have a global project homes for all we have means and technology! but toxic oil banking people in power of us and would not make money then loss power! We have the technology and fiscal modelling for green homes for all. 1980 worked on a theoretical project greening London homes for all! but we have a toxic system mmmm time for global change

    • @ConsumerWatchdogUK
      @ConsumerWatchdogUK 2 года назад +4

      @@bosoerjadi2838 Er no. The problems created by government is not solved by more government.

    • @ConsumerWatchdogUK
      @ConsumerWatchdogUK 2 года назад

      End the state. Without state violence there's no more bribes, delays waiting for third party permission, no support for land ownership or unilateral contracts, finance not provided by QE.

    • @bosoerjadi2838
      @bosoerjadi2838 2 года назад +4

      @@ConsumerWatchdogUK Erm.. why not?
      The key thing with problems created by the government is not that it has been created by the government but how it has been created by the government.

  • @drag0nwolf
    @drag0nwolf 2 года назад +562

    Of course a video on the possible solutions is needed.... Was actually hoping that you would cover the topic in a bit more detail.
    Btw I think another reason for the housing shortage and sudden increase in prices this year was the stamp duty holiday, low interest rates and most importantly the practice of banks giving interest only mortgage due to which people who already home owners are buying a second property to let out, As the rents cover the mortgage repayment with neat a couple hundred pounds in profit. Thus increasing the house prices unrealistically.

    • @wpjohn91
      @wpjohn91 2 года назад +8

      Also 2nd houses and foreign purchase

    • @lonevoice
      @lonevoice 2 года назад +6

      Under Thatcher we also had the deregulation of the banks and with that, under John Major the start of Buy to Let which really took off under Tony Blair, including himself. This created additional demand for house purchasing. Then of course in the last year with have had Sunak's special house price hike of over 10%. The interest only mortgage is the second speculative stage by the banks in Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis which then slips into the third Ponzi stage and an inevitable crash. Politicians seem to become increasingly incompetent with each passing decade, and we already know that this is only going to end in tears.

    • @BURNERT08
      @BURNERT08 2 года назад

      i concur

    • @arghjayem
      @arghjayem 2 года назад +2

      According to an article in the Guardian in 2017, 1 in 10 UK adults owned a second home whilst simultaneously 4 in 10 UK adults owned no property whatsoever. And of that half (52%) of all the assets held in additional properties is held by the baby boomers, born 1946-65, and a further quarter (25%) by generation X, born 1966-80.
      There isn’t a lack of properties in this country. There are enough house for every homeless person and every single person or family to live. The problem is the distribution of housing, both in terms of singular individuals owning multiple properties as well as the fact that people want to live in specific areas and not all houses are where the majority of people desire to live.
      Something needs doing about it but I can’t see this government or the opposition doing anything about it anytime soon.

    • @Eikenhorst
      @Eikenhorst 2 года назад

      @@arghjayem Sure, there are enough properties, except a large chunk of them are rented out. So are you saying we should somehow confiscate those properties and give them to the person currently renting?

  • @warmfeetwinner760
    @warmfeetwinner760 2 года назад +270

    This video could also be titled Australia's or Canada's or New Zealand's housing crisis. 4 videos for the price of 1!

    • @olliesims27
      @olliesims27 2 года назад +20

      Australia's biggest issue is the low capital gains tax, which means property investors can just fuck about and make money

    • @scifino1
      @scifino1 2 года назад +13

      It fits Germany quite well, too.

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 2 года назад +15

      And the Netherlands. This is going to be a long list...

    • @loc4725
      @loc4725 2 года назад +10

      @@olliesims27 CGT here in the U.K. is *lower* than the tax applied to earnings though employment. Or to put that another way the government favours parasitic money extraction over money created through creating value for others.

    • @mojejaje2073
      @mojejaje2073 2 года назад +2

      Exactly, Regulation in Australia is 💀

  • @stevenlong1547
    @stevenlong1547 2 года назад +27

    How about we only sell houses to people who want to live in them not rent them.

    • @HhhGgg-iy1mk
      @HhhGgg-iy1mk 2 года назад

      Who is "we" mate?

    • @Machismo1983
      @Machismo1983 2 года назад +7

      @@HhhGgg-iy1mk United Kingdom (and as a result it's citizens and therefore it's government)

    • @HhhGgg-iy1mk
      @HhhGgg-iy1mk 2 года назад

      @@Machismo1983 well ok. But there are people who are British and who want to buy houses to rent them - or do what the hell they desire with their private property. What about them?

    • @HhhGgg-iy1mk
      @HhhGgg-iy1mk 2 года назад

      By the way - isn't it the British Developers who are responsible for this mess, at least to a degree?

    • @Machismo1983
      @Machismo1983 2 года назад +2

      @@HhhGgg-iy1mk What about them?
      If everyone has a house, the 'buy to let' market will collapse.
      Much like the creation of the motor car caused the horse drawn carriage market to crash.

  • @homolgus1
    @homolgus1 2 года назад +46

    For a house to increase more than the annual wages of its owner is insanity!

    • @reheyesd8666
      @reheyesd8666 2 года назад +2

      Buy one as soon as you can even if it means living with your mum and dad until you are 28. Just save up and don't be a rent serf

    • @Fezzy976
      @Fezzy976 2 года назад +3

      @@reheyesd8666 how about there be BOTH options. Social housing should of stayed at a certain percentage of that of private developments. But it didn't, people in the 80's brought up their council homes in their droves but the governments since then never reinvested that money into more social housing. Leading to a supply and demand issue. You have high demand but low supply, meaning the houses that being built become more expensive. And the houses being built are private leading to insane mortgage costs or high rent costs from a private landlord.
      If we had had a steady supply of BOTH social and private developments there wouldn't be this crisis. The right to buy scheme was a good one in principle but in practise it was a long term disaster and totally mismanged by all preceeding governments.

    • @raukoring
      @raukoring 2 года назад +1

      All my neighbours live in council houses and refuse to buy them for extremely cheap price because anything happens they call the number an council solves it. While anything happens to my house that I'll be paying off for next 25 years, I pay for it. The country is full of leeches and crooks who exploit the system whether rich or poor

    • @Fezzy976
      @Fezzy976 2 года назад +2

      @@raukoring What you are explaining there is a wage issue. Those people have become comfortable paying rent and more than likely couldn't afford to buy those houses and pay for the up keep themselves. Those people are probably living pay check to pay check and you expect them to take out a mortgage? When more than likely their jobs are not secure enough and their pay isn't high enough. This is what people say about wage stagnation. Prices for everything have continued to rise but wages haven't kept up at the same pace. Capitalism and consumerism 1 O 1.

    • @raukoring
      @raukoring 2 года назад +5

      @@Fezzy976 my neighbour can buy his council house for 40K. the same house I bought for 145K. They're exactly the same houses mirror attached to each other. I'm a non skilled warehouse worker, pay my taxes NI, never asked for any benefits even when I was eligible because I don't consider that my money, I didn't earn them and as I'm not a cripple and can earn my money I save what I can and do overtimes. What I'm saying is I paid 145K+ interest while the neighbour refuse to pay 40K cuz if his boiler goes down, he calls the number and they bring a new one. If my boiler goes down, my bank account looses £2.000. if his roof breaks down, he calls the number. If my roof breaks down, I use all my savings/take a loan. I don't care he can't save his money. Other neighbour who works part time, spends evenings in jacuzzi in his council backyard with his unemployed wife while I'm in work thinking how can I support my future child while this guy has three kids I've no idea where he gets money for them from his part time unskilled job. Other neighbour living with his "ex" wife and new born, while officially renting other house. It's worth for him to send £250 every month to some people who put him on their rent so that his wife can be claiming single unemployed mother money living on her own.. while he lives with her. I could go on. Just saying. Tons of leeches here. Would be awesome to loose both the thieves from top AND from bottom

  • @saffaboy2007
    @saffaboy2007 2 года назад +35

    Why even live in London if you're earning under 50k? Literally working to survive. What a waste of life.

    • @maximyles
      @maximyles 2 года назад +2

      and theres the solution. Move out of London, live in less competitive areas, find your own stomping ground. Prettysimple.

  • @unclesleven7256
    @unclesleven7256 2 года назад +194

    One of the biggest issues for young people right now. Good Stuff.

    • @peterclarke7006
      @peterclarke7006 2 года назад +21

      Young people?!
      I'm 43, earn about the national average, but because I'm single and rent, there's no way I'll ever be able to afford a deposit, let alone be able to move somewhere bigger than the studio I'm in unless I lipsticks and move somewhere cheaper where, as per, there's less jobs and worse salaries.

    • @JakeyG-eq1un
      @JakeyG-eq1un 2 года назад +3

      @@peterclarke7006 it generally affects young people more

    • @KelticStingray
      @KelticStingray 2 года назад +13

      @Henry Gill-Pratt uh no. People in the countryside oppose any and all development. This country is entrenched in the "I've got mine so you can f*ck off mentality"

    • @adamcw88
      @adamcw88 2 года назад +5

      The wider issue here is why the desire to own. Consistently my non real estate portfolio has out preformed the housing I own, by some considerable margin. Anyone with a compounding clue can tell you 5% a year since 1993 will kill any house gain in any area in the UK. The UK has this insane desire to want to own.
      I own for diversification it's easier to dump property into my daughters trusts than other assets but if you don't need to own then borrow to invest elsewhere. You won't listen no-one will. Non residential outpacers about 60,000 per million per year.

    • @8G00SE8
      @8G00SE8 2 года назад

      @@JakeyG-eq1un It affects young people the least other than those who already have houses. This video totally missed a key point that the government has factored in, birth rate, if it's below 2 the population is shrinking, it's currently 1.6 per woman so for young people this opens up a massive opportunity in 10-20 years.

  • @voice.of.reason
    @voice.of.reason 2 года назад +71

    You missed out the other main cause of house price inflation: The increased availbility of credit and stupidly low interest rates

    • @dwal007
      @dwal007 2 года назад +4

      A far more relevant factor than the others listed....

    • @EpicSlug
      @EpicSlug 2 года назад +4

      @@samuelboczek1834 But thats fine. inflation will shrink the size of the mortgage. My interest rate is 1.8% So on a £400k mortgage interest would only be £600/month. If that £500k house is worth a million in 10 years it will soon look like a great deal. Low interest rates are the key, it costs almost nothing to borrow money these days. The price of the house is irrelevant if it goes up the only thing that matters is qualifying for the mortgage terms.

    • @maythesciencebewithyou
      @maythesciencebewithyou 2 года назад +8

      People have been told to buy properties as an investment. In Germany they call it "Beton-Gold". Low interest rates incentivise people to become private investors. And those private investors compete with those people who are actually looking for a place to live, artificially increasing the demand. Investors tend to have way more money than your average young couple or family. They can easily outbid young and poorer folks, buy the property and then put it on the market with increased rent. They don't care much about the mortgages due to low interest rates and mainly because it will be payed off by their tenants either way.
      Since banks don't give them much interest rates, more and more wealthy people have transferred their money into the property market, expecting high returns year after year. And to be able to keep that up, prices need to increase forever at this rate. Something, which is unsustainable and only benefits the investors.

    • @maximkostyukovich3913
      @maximkostyukovich3913 2 года назад +1

      @@maythesciencebewithyou It is also very socially acceptable to "invest" in property. People who do that seem to be respectful society members.
      But these returns on investment have to come from somewhere. And they come from people unable to get on the property ladder.
      Nobody seems to have a problem with this -- "that's capitalism for you, babe"
      Same people who would snub buying a Primark t-shirt because "it's exploitation, the workers are not even paid minimal wages! shame!" seem to be OK with the fact that those people who will pay off their BTL mortgages by their rent -- i.e. money which they would otherwise spend building their own equity -- will not be saving for their own property. It's capitalism, baby! Not exploitation at the smallest!... Except it totally is.
      "Why don't these people buy their properties if they don't want to rent forever!" Because they won't be able to.
      Worse even, a toxic advice to invest in property to provide for your old age.
      "How dare you attack house prices growth? We have invested into property to fund our retirements!" Keeping schtum that these money are drained off other people, who also deserve to have their houses.
      If that's not exploitation, I don't know what is.
      Those who will rent forever will somehow have to pay for their pensions by their own earnings.

    • @CLhighlightsful
      @CLhighlightsful 2 года назад

      The result of foreign investment in the UK and also banks generating digital cash for mortgages with no back-up. In reality banks should destroy every time there is a repayment to each digitally created loan and keep interest. But they obviosuly don’t do this. This system increased the affordability of home buying in the last 30 years coupled with foreign investment. If everyone actually sold their houses and decided to take cash and move abroad, the system would break down, but they know clearly people wouldnt do this so it is a perfect place to hide inflation due to digitally generated cash. Another example is the stock market. So in summary 2-3 % pay rise you get (if that...) every year based on Retail Price Index, they should factor in this HIDDEN inflation in housing market. People now have to take mortgages as couples rather singles as they did 10-20 years ago. Granted the interest rate in 1990 was 15% and probably you had to pay similar monthly payments. They managed to offset this price increase by reducing the interest rates, but how much further can they do this ? Surely you cannot have negative interest rates. The whole system is broken and in the future we will need to have 100 year mortgages to pass affordability...

  • @BiW1nning
    @BiW1nning 2 года назад +63

    You've missed the absolute biggest driver of house price increase: interest rates.
    With rates falling so low, it makes monthly payments lower, driving up prices. This comes at the expense of higher initial capital requirement, causing that divide.

    • @miilkypills
      @miilkypills 2 года назад +2

      This is mostly true, although interest rates only matter if supply is limited. If supply is limited house prices get bid up to a point where it is marginally affordable - which is determined by monthly repayments and thus interest rates. If the market were well supplied then the price would not get pushed up to the edge of affordability

    • @GRYL180
      @GRYL180 2 года назад +4

      This doesn't make much sense, actually. You are suggesting that borrowing costs are so low that the housing market is flooded with more buyers than sellers. That's not the case for even a 4% SVR keeps most people off the housing ladder...mortgages have to be maintained and the reality is most people are struggling. So, what might be closer to the truth is that whilst prices have been rising (for years), real wages have been trending downwards (for years). What everyone is seeing now is the gap between prices and the inability of working people to keep up. In actual fact, when no one can afford to buy, there is no housing market; maybe that is the real crisis.

    • @__Wanderer
      @__Wanderer 2 года назад +4

      @@GRYL180 rates are 1.45% for a mortgage (at least where i live in europe)... so yeah it is rates. If you have a somewhat decent jobs you can easily borrow 200-300k. Add savings and parents lending a helping hand and you have a recipe for everyone to fomo buy.

    • @__Wanderer
      @__Wanderer 2 года назад +1

      bingo. and the FED is to blame. every central bank follows their lead - watch "The power of the fed" by PBS - it's really great / scary.

    • @gizmo5601
      @gizmo5601 2 года назад +2

      @@__Wanderer Exactly. When I bought my first place in 1990 I was paying over 12% mortgage interest. If I was looking now, with 2/3% interest rates and similar income I could afford to bid far higher on the same property so pushing prices up significantly.

  • @robdabanks
    @robdabanks 2 года назад +484

    Solutions would be good. Especially covering alternative options rising.

    • @alizaidi2893
      @alizaidi2893 2 года назад +13

      Build more houses

    • @chewieqtpie
      @chewieqtpie 2 года назад +20

      @@alizaidi2893 politicians wouldnt allow that, they want an artificial housing bubble, they clearly didnt learn from 2008

    • @tinthings314
      @tinthings314 2 года назад +18

      Politicans know the solutions, they just lack courage and it wont benefit them politically. Reduce immigration numbers, raise capital gains tax on second houses, restrict foreign buyers by putting high taxes, and put in place rent control scheme like in Sweden

    • @uniqbuy
      @uniqbuy 2 года назад +6

      @@tinthings314 there are no solutions palatable to all parts of the electorate. FTB - wants prices to fall. Homeowners, landlords, pension funds, builders - want them to stay the same or go up.

    • @jeffsterling2809
      @jeffsterling2809 2 года назад +14

      @@alizaidi2893 This. It's hardly rocket science. The older generation wants to keep their houses expensive, they don't care about us. Even though they all bought their houses cheap.

  • @Keyfromtheend
    @Keyfromtheend 2 года назад +118

    I do think part of the issue is people owning multiple homes with the intention of renting and treating them as investments. The problem with that is no economic benefit is produced when you are renting out and you are essentially increasing the house prices by holding up houses that could potentially be bought.

    • @wesleytabak1190
      @wesleytabak1190 2 года назад +9

      That is indeed part of the problem.

    • @mitsterful
      @mitsterful 2 года назад +47

      Landlordism is basically using someone else's labour and hard work to pay your mortgage. It's quite disgusting. Not every landlord is bad or malicious, but the concept itself is quite fucked.

    • @JUSTTRYANDSTOPIT
      @JUSTTRYANDSTOPIT 2 года назад +36

      Landlords are parasites
      They make nothing
      They create nothing
      They live off the sweat of workers

    • @jakecakestake8071
      @jakecakestake8071 2 года назад +15

      But they also play an essential role,
      What are you going to do if you need to work somewhere else in the country for a year?
      A) sell your house, and buy another
      B) short term rent
      C) buy a 2nd house
      D) Live in a hotel
      I can understand some level of Landlord hate, but I would argue Mum and Dad who buy a 2nd home to rent / holiday let out to supplement their retirement income or whatever, is not the issue.
      The consistent manipulation of supply, and incentives like “help to buy” are more to blame IMO.

    • @Starstung
      @Starstung 2 года назад +4

      Aiming a product at students and young professionals not ready to settle down is also a efficient way to supply accommodation for these segments. Rent is less an issue in Germany where there is better public transport, better state provision, strategic planning and higher density of housing apartments.
      So it’s not renting and landlordism.

  • @capri2673
    @capri2673 2 года назад +64

    Remember "You will own nothing and be happy".

  • @AWest-ns3dl
    @AWest-ns3dl 2 года назад +12

    We need to put more emphasis on restoring empty and abandoned properties, rather than building new houses.

    • @thomasczthomash1859
      @thomasczthomash1859 2 года назад +1

      There isn't as many as you think. We need a lot more than that.

    • @AWest-ns3dl
      @AWest-ns3dl 2 года назад +1

      @@thomasczthomash1859 plenty up north, Wales and Scottish borders. Not included is also second homes and empty rentals. Buy-to-rent will earn more through rent than their mortgage and upkeep, maintaining higher rents than mortgages.

    • @maximkostyukovich3913
      @maximkostyukovich3913 2 года назад

      @@AWest-ns3dl While most of our new stock is lapped up by BTL landlords, I'm afraid no amount of refurbished abandoned properties will do it.
      The BTL landlords are called "investors" but in reality they, like vampires, are sucking housing away from those who should be able to buy it -- but can't -- their money availability does not depend on house prices much, as they pay off their mortgages with someone else's broken hope money. First time buyers, however, don't have unlimited resources. And all these ideas, like help to buy, or allowing to use "the bank of mum and dad" (even this is attacked by some banks who demand to see the own income source from FTB's and call it "responsible lending"), or offering 30-40 years mortgages (sad and disgusting travesty sucking money from unhappy poor people their entire working life with ridiculous amount of interest to pay for it) -- they only try to cater to existing unfair "market" conditions.

  • @anshulaich6026
    @anshulaich6026 2 года назад +90

    I want a whole series on this. Including debating right to buy, and the impact of low interest rates.

    • @nathaneddy502
      @nathaneddy502 2 года назад

      Low interest rates are designed to generate tax without actively putting tax up. If interest rates were high everyone would save in their bank and not spend their money thus not stimulating the economy. If you want interest rates higher then expect tax rates higher which is unpopular in conservative government especially since the main target for tax is now the extremely wealthy. The simple issue is that no one wants to build houses. It wouldn't matter for low interests if a lower percentage of overall houses were renting. However local governments don't like that because it brings their land value down especially if the external estates are incredibly successful which they will be because of low mortgage rates.

    • @bryan7938
      @bryan7938 2 года назад +1

      Right to buy was the problem. Sell low with no penalties to then sell on cashing in on that profit BUT WORSE don’t replace stock. I can say that as a) grandparents and aunts had houses in East London, grandparents wouldn’t buy despite children trying to buy on their behalf but aunts did but however stayed until passing away. B) I looked to buy with my fiancée between 1986-1988 and all were ex council and priced the same as non ex council. West London then Essex. We would turn up for a viewing to be told ‘sold’. Mental. My daughter has a part buy part buy rent property, she’s disabled and works, bought 2010. System is broken. My sister joined the buy for profit game and bugged the life out of me. In 33 years we have moved once. A house should be for living in, not short term profit. My opinion, I won’t reply or engage.

    • @PaulGoux
      @PaulGoux 2 года назад +1

      I live in a garage which I've worked on myself and I pay £60 a month in rent, I've spent about £2000 to make it livable. I dont have running water or electricity, but I have alternatives, but the fact is it wouldnt be hard for the council to connect this if they wanted to, however they wont because the houing market is a racket. Consider how many years a mortgage takes to pay off and you'll understand why no politician wants to allow people to build their own homes. You have to work at least 40 hours a week to afford to make payments, and you have to work for around 40 years to clear the mortgage. People are a resource which is simply too valuable and the housing market and the motor industry is the key to keeping peole in the rat race.
      Building more houses is not the solution. I live in britain and they are always building more houses. The fact is there is too much money to be made in construction.
      Heres a breakdown of salaries per hour and jobs on a construction site.
      Labourer £9
      Forklift £14-18
      Dumper £15
      Excavator £20 +
      Manager/forman £25+
      Bricklayer £20+
      Carpenter £20+
      Electrician £20+
      These are just some to name a few but should give you an idea of what to expect and you have to add to the health and safety inspector, slingers etc etc.
      Construction always run over budget costs are cut as much as possible, contractors cut corners so they can bill for more hours etc etc, list of problems go on. What should essentially cost around £50k costs the end buyer £100 because of inflation, and I don't mean standard economic inflation, I mean the fact that these people are straight up willing to sell you plasterboard homes for the price of a stone house.
      The houses are of poor quality and many new builds fail inspections upon completion.
      The solution is to let people build their own homes but corruption is never going to let that happen.

    • @jameslincs
      @jameslincs 2 года назад +3

      This channel seems to have a left wing ideology (which historically harms the poorest the most) and are clearly economically illiterate, so not the best creators to ask to create such a series. Try reasonTV or reading Thomas Sowell’s book “housing book and bust” which is brilliant (and available as audio)

    • @nathaneddy502
      @nathaneddy502 2 года назад

      @@jameslincs if you believe pure capitalistic views then you want an economy to collapse under its own pressure.

  • @jackkaragoz9251
    @jackkaragoz9251 2 года назад +37

    You missed out all the demand side factors pushing prices up such as how housing is taxed, the financial credit system, domestic (landlords), corporations, and wealthy foreign investors buying up housing (especially in London) etc. It's not all about supply and just building wherever we can, its as much a distribution crisis as it is a supply one.

  • @Katie-ic5jz
    @Katie-ic5jz 2 года назад +2

    I really appreciate how clear and accessible all of TLDR's explainer videos are. Articles and videos you can actually understand on these seriously complicated topics (without doing loads of confused googling) are so hard to come by - a solutions video would be great!

  • @Roryact
    @Roryact 2 года назад +21

    The solution is to make rental properties a bad investment. There are enough homes, they are just not owned by the people living in them. You can see this easily enough because while house prices may double, the amount of homeless doesn't double.
    Tax residential land which isn't your primary residence at an enormous rate. Make holding land as attractive as hot sick. Gear up the government to buy a new set of social housing stock for the people who do need to rent when properties get dumped to market.

    • @Hashterix
      @Hashterix 2 года назад +2

      Ah yes, because when you can't afford a place of your own you must automatically end up on the street rather than suffering other forms of reduced living standards such as being forced to live with parents until you're 30 or live in a house share for an amount of money that should normally be able to afford you an entire house to yourself.
      Rented or owned, there are not enough properties to house the current UK population. Simple as that.

    • @alexc7367
      @alexc7367 2 года назад +6

      @@Hashterix "there are not enough properties to house the current UK population" then where the fock are they living in? Their shoes? Unless half the UK is homeless and i haven't noticed, there's enough roofs to cover us all. Problem is who owns the houses? My landlord owns 6 of them, 2 inherited and the rest mortgaged and he's a small fry i reckon.
      Rory is right taxation on rental homes should be progressive until your third property is no longer profitable to rent. Your free capitalism will make the majority of the population unfree. No one needs more than 3 houses.

    • @mdo
      @mdo 2 года назад +4

      @@Hashterix totally incorrect. There are more than enough houses out there for everyone in the UK. It's jist that most houses are owned by a few. Be it landlords or large companies.
      The government could easily regulate this by progressive taxation and by building affordable houses that only first-time buyers can purchase with no sale or rent clause for a number of years.
      Of course this will never happen as the interest is not to help the young generation but to fleech the people.

    • @Hashterix
      @Hashterix 2 года назад +1

      @@mdo stupid argument. Yes there are enough, there are enough houses in the world to house everyone. In fact, there are hundreds of millions of empty properties!! Can you believe it?! Problem solved!
      No. It's not that simple and we understand the world doesn't work like a child thinks it does, do we. Those houses are not where the population is. The demand is high in specific areas. What's your solution? We move thousands of people to live in derelict mining towns that have lots of empty houses but no jobs? Or perhaps we should move all the homeless into the millions of empty properties in China. Oh, how easy and simple of a solution 👏👏👏
      It's supply and demand, it always has been and it always will be.
      Also, just to highlight how disengaged you are from reality, those schemes you suggested do actually exist, and they do not help whatsoever, they only push prices even higher because the DEMAND is so high anyone who wants to buy has to stretch themselves financially to their limit because if they don't then the next person does.

    • @Hashterix
      @Hashterix 2 года назад +1

      @@alexc7367 oh yes, you're right, because nobody needs a house do they, everyone can just live in a bedroom and they can share a kitchen and bathroom; heck, they can even share a bedroom!
      How do you determine there are not enough houses? How about the fact you cannot afford it because there's always someone ready to fill any space that comes up and keeps the market inflated. You go where there is more supply and less demand and houses get cheaper, that is a fact.
      If a landlord owns a house does that mean nobody lives in it?? No, it means it's more likely to be lived in as efficiently as possible, as in nobody is going to pay extra for space they don't need.
      All my peers, ALL of them, lived with their parents until age 27+. And you are telling me that there is enough housing. Go pull that rod out of your arse.

  • @aureliacazorzi9758
    @aureliacazorzi9758 2 года назад +80

    Yes please make one about the solutions! one of the more interesting videos I’ve seen from TLDR in the last months. I’m a long term subscriber!

    • @PaulGoux
      @PaulGoux 2 года назад

      the solution is alternative accommodation. I live in a garage and whilst it doesnt have electricity or water the council could connect that if they wanted to. But they wont because its not in their interest to allow me to afford to live without having to work.

  • @davidblyth4008
    @davidblyth4008 2 года назад +29

    When I started my PhD in 2014 I had an argument with a guest lecturer saying that young people don't want to own houses and I was wrong. We liked the flexibility he said. Twak

    • @maximkostyukovich3913
      @maximkostyukovich3913 2 года назад +6

      Yeah, you're right. What a pathetic excuse from the same sort of people who potentially had contributed in deprivation of young people of their potential own homes.

  • @OWilko
    @OWilko 2 года назад +3

    Another reason for the spike in house prices in the last 2 years is because of Grenfell Tower, there are a million apartments that cannot be sold or bought in the UK right now because of the fire safety scandal, therefore people can’t buy cheaper apartments so they have to buy houses

    • @yeetjones927
      @yeetjones927 2 года назад

      @Magdelena Cloutier im sorry did you just say grenfall was a conspiracy?

  • @Fordnan
    @Fordnan 2 года назад +55

    Imagine joining a game of Monopoly, where all the properties are owned already. Your parents scrimp and save the odd pound they manage to avoid paying on their way round, but all they have to show for it is Old Kent Road.
    'Hang on,' you say, 'How am I supposed to get on the property ladder if I pay all my wages on rent, transport and utilities?'
    'It's a matter of Hard Work, young person,' the owner of the whole back row (plus hotels) tells you. 'I didn't get where I am today without Hard Work. Okay, so my parents gifted me a fair amount, but that's only right, after all the Hard Work they did.'
    The system is set up to keep the rich getting ever richer, and the plebs hanging on by their finger nails. Every time anyone says 'Let's rethink the rules' they are shot to pieces.
    So, do we continue playing the game with the rules the way they are, so things never change, or do we do what is in our power as a democracy, and rewrite them so that nobody gets super-rich, but everyone is able to do more than just survive?

    • @Fordnan
      @Fordnan 2 года назад +19

      @@stevenjoy3537 Oh, my saviour! Thank you, now I know to 'better myself'. It means Hard Work, right, the thing that always pays off?
      So I'll go to university like all Hard Workers do, get a job, pay rent for a decade or so while I save what I can to buy a run-down house in the arse-end of nowhere with the leaky roof next to the crack den and the ex-convict who beats his wife and shouts abuse through the walls. Nice place to raise children!
      Speaking of which, now I live a hundred miles from family and friends, what do I do for the impromptu help with childcare that every family needs?
      Of course it's possible to take such a path, but why should we have to just to make people who are already excessively rich even more money? It's the system, stupid. 'Self betterment' is just another bullshit tory slogan, it's the system that needs to be improved, not the individual.

    • @ClickHere4Naruto
      @ClickHere4Naruto 2 года назад +1

      @@Fordnan I mean you can play it a lot smarter, save 20k buy a house outside of London for £50, rent it out and increase your income a lot.

    • @Fordnan
      @Fordnan 2 года назад +6

      @@ClickHere4Naruto How much is left of the median income each month post income tax, minus rent, minus food and utilities, transport, council tax etc? How long does it take to save £20k? As for buying to let, then you're part of the problem. Good work!

    • @tomhermens7698
      @tomhermens7698 2 года назад +1

      M XP. are you off your rocker? This is not a game of monopoly where you can't build anymore. It has to do with the government keeping the banking sector afloat through mortgages. The uk needs 1 000 000 more houses this year.

    • @tomhermens7698
      @tomhermens7698 2 года назад +1

      M XP. are you off your rocker? This is not a game of monopoly where you can't build anymore. It has to do with the government keeping the banking sector afloat through mortgages. The uk needs 1 000 000 more houses this year.

  • @getnohappy
    @getnohappy 2 года назад +39

    Two very important things missing from this video:
    1) The section in inequality forgot rent-seeking: The younger generation are being bled dry by high rents, so can't "just cut out the avocado toast" to get a deposit. But gives a nice income for a landlord to buy another property to rent...
    2) The section on 'why' missed un-built homes (I don't know the technical term): in England, developers are just squatting on land where houses have permission to be built - over a million home apparently. It's deliberate supply restriction. This was discussed at a tangent, but didn't mention the landowners are actively not developing land with building permission.
    Personally, 2) should come before any discussion on Green Belt and planning law. There are a million homes that could be built without any changes, they just aren't being.

    • @JudoP_slinging
      @JudoP_slinging 2 года назад +15

      I've talked to an architect who confirms 2). There's a point at which people need to accept that the free market is simply not gonna provide the best outcomes in all situations. Society needs housing, and the big developers holding land to increase demand is doing sweet FA to help anything except making them money. Housing and land is an asset for a country and companies need to be encouraged to be productive for society, with regulation, penalties, taxes etc. Same goes for multi-home ownership.

    • @chrisgardner4326
      @chrisgardner4326 2 года назад +10

      Exactly this. I work in the industry (though mainly for Local Authority clients) and the issue is that developers will always want to keep supply low as it means high profits. Then they attack the planning system for low housing delivery when they are more part of the reason. The tactics developers use to get out of paying affordable housing is frankly disgusting and they need to be held accountable. The real solution is for the Government to build houses again, which is what I advise to all my Local Authority clients.

    • @willbxtn
      @willbxtn 2 года назад +3

      2) is a myth, I'm afraid.
      1) Is a real major problem - you can't save for a deposit to get on the housing ladder as you're spending all your money on, erm, paying someone else's mortgage.

    • @evancombs5159
      @evancombs5159 2 года назад +1

      @@chrisgardner4326 developers can only get away with this if it is too difficult for competition to enter the market. The solution is to make it easier for new competition to come in and disrupt these predatory practices.

    • @tomralph8540
      @tomralph8540 2 года назад

      @@willbxtn Move in with family or friends, or rent a cheaper house/apartment. If you don't like the terms and conditions of renting a house, don't sign the contract. Take some responsibility.

  • @ranjith27
    @ranjith27 2 года назад +237

    I'm just marvelling at how quickly y'all can put together a video.

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 2 года назад +7

      It was already done.
      Most video are produced one or two weeks in advance.

    • @justanerd414
      @justanerd414 2 года назад +1

      @@paxundpeace9970 I don't think news videos work like that,
      Although more general topics certainly are made in a reasonable span of time

    • @ea9167
      @ea9167 2 года назад +11

      I think they put them together so quickly that they don't check it over. Lots of little editing discrepancies in this video alone.

    • @user-ek2zx8tt2k
      @user-ek2zx8tt2k 2 года назад

      @@paxundpeace9970 yet if every single video were to be made days or weeks in advance they would have the exact same issue, you know that right?

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 2 года назад

      @@user-ek2zx8tt2k i worked myself in media production

  • @AlexOnARoll
    @AlexOnARoll 2 года назад +8

    This is a fantastic and well-sourced video. Great work guys, I learned a ton.

  • @gdreading9088
    @gdreading9088 2 года назад +9

    When I bought my first house in 1980 I was told keep your monthly mortgage payments equal to one weeks pay and you will be alright. Further more, the large house builders/developers buy land and sit on it waiting for house prices to rise before building.

    • @jpgpearson
      @jpgpearson 2 года назад

      its called capitalism .... cant stand the conditioned democracy loving sociopaths who are clueless....ie nearly everybody.

  • @alpachinobarlatino2290
    @alpachinobarlatino2290 2 года назад +36

    We already don't have enough green belt areas. We also do need to farm some of our food. You can't just build houses everywhere.

    • @fiddlersontheramp5417
      @fiddlersontheramp5417 2 года назад

      Hate to admit it, but fair point.

    • @tomralph8540
      @tomralph8540 2 года назад

      Socialists won't stop until every inch of Britain is made up of grey, concrete apartment blocks.

    • @stevelam5898
      @stevelam5898 2 года назад

      You are right. The problem in England is that people build horizontally instead of vertically.

  • @robeagleR
    @robeagleR 2 года назад +86

    Only way I get a house is when my mother and father pass away, it’s messed up to say the least.

    • @enduser8410
      @enduser8410 2 года назад +1

      Assuming you got siblings, how does that work out with them?

    • @thegrandmuftiofwakanda
      @thegrandmuftiofwakanda 2 года назад +4

      Better get busy greasing the stairs...( and ungrease them when you move in ).

    • @Cashback13
      @Cashback13 2 года назад +8

      That's the other thing that wasn't mentioned in the video, that a lot more people who own their own house who are obviously middle-aged-retired are living much longer, which a) delays the availability of existing houses coming free for people in their 20s/30s and b) means that the house prices keeps rising for the extra 15-20 years they live in it. Plus C) just cause you are lucky to have a house become available that someone who was in their 80s/90s even lived in. Chances are they wouldn't have done much to it for decades since retiring, so their is the added cost of doing it up so upgrade and modernize it properly.
      My Parents are pretty old now and well into retirement, but are both healthy and spritely still could easily last another 10-15 years, so it won't be of any real benefit to me by the age I'll be as and when that happens, more of a random 'bonus' in the 2nd half of my life. So I may end up selling it and putting the money into savings/investments/pension plan for when I get too old to work anymore.
      and it's not like anyone is chucking £50-60k a year jobs at people in their 20-30s either to allow them to get on the ladder, so it's either lots of debt in one go, or somehow budget and worry about every penny for 20-25 years and have no life enjoyment. (and who wants to make that kind of commitment at 21)

    • @joshdawson5201
      @joshdawson5201 2 года назад +6

      No you won’t, the state will seize it for their care. Unlucky bro, it’s the renting life for us.

    • @SofaKingShit
      @SofaKingShit 2 года назад +1

      The people with parents that also had to rent won't be getting a house at all unless people like you rent it to them. And yet you complain about your life..

  • @bradm7046
    @bradm7046 2 года назад +10

    A partial easy fix would be more heavily tax second, third and so on houses in a tier system.

    • @Capybarrrraaaa
      @Capybarrrraaaa 2 года назад

      Which'll just drive-up rent, surely? Why not just ban renting-out with no intention of sharing ownership-rights?

  • @aletemaso
    @aletemaso 2 года назад +23

    Worst thing is that you are trapped in a rat race: you spend most of your salary on the rent, cannot save any money, therefore will never have enough for a deposit. What will happen when you retire and your pension barely covers the rent? We will have most of nation living on benefits, if we can afford, which I doubt

    • @menatol
      @menatol 2 года назад +5

      Totally agree , I can afford my rent , I can afford mortgage but can’t save enough for a deposit and that is frustrating, I’m in a cycle I can’t get out of .....

    • @rafaelgonzalezrobles7380
      @rafaelgonzalezrobles7380 2 года назад

      maybe inheriting is the only way out

    • @menatol
      @menatol 2 года назад +1

      @@rafaelgonzalezrobles7380 that's what I'm waiting for ..got good genes in my family so everyone live a loooooong life

  • @dorkangel1076
    @dorkangel1076 2 года назад +121

    I would be interested in seeing how much of the housing stock is being rented vs owned by the dweller and how much of the original council housing stock that was sold off is now in the hands of landlords rather than ex council tenants.

    • @Lennon6412
      @Lennon6412 2 года назад +14

      It's about 40%.
      A disastorous policy.

    • @jackhopewell1745
      @jackhopewell1745 2 года назад +10

      If you have the right to buy you also get the right to sell later on. A policy that by itself would not have caused the housing crisis. Giving people access to buying their own homes helped many working class get on the housing market, offering social mobility and security over their own lives. Immigration, a lack of new house building and quantitative easing driving fixed assets higher unfortunately made demand and speculation of the existing housing stock cloud out the success of this policy. People often blame landlords for the cause of the housing crisis, but in reality the rise of buy to let’s is a symptom that exacerbates the crisis but not a cause.

    • @Lennon6412
      @Lennon6412 2 года назад +20

      @@jackhopewell1745 40% of former council houses sold under Right to Buy are now private rental.
      It's helped to lock a generation out of housing and pushed back social mobility. Housing has become an investment which has pushed prices up.

    • @Lennon6412
      @Lennon6412 2 года назад +3

      @@jackhopewell1745 We are building a lot of new houses though, see the housebuilding figures since 2010.
      Lets say we suddenly grant planning permission for 100,000 more houses per year than we currently have, where are we going to find the capability to build them? Are we going to magic builders out of thin air? They can't build much faster than they are doing.
      I agree about low interest rates, but it's very hard to raise them without meaning that a lot of people can no longer afford their mortgage.
      We need a significant council house building scheme, an end to right to buy and buy to let mortgages, rent controls and a limit on the number of homes you can own. House prices need to stagnate and allow wages to catch up.

    • @bobuilt10
      @bobuilt10 2 года назад +3

      @@Lennon6412 you need to understand the purpose of the policy before declaring it disastrous. The idea was to allow the government to replace its ageing, outdated and high maintenance housing stock, allow tenants to buy but only after a qualifying period, then let the local authorities use said proceeds to build new more modern affordable housing. The concept of the policy was good however the execution was bad once the local authorities decided to put the onus for affordable housing on the private sector via the local planners and pocketed the proceeds. In summary good idea poorly executed.

  • @nathancopestake2683
    @nathancopestake2683 2 года назад +97

    I would like a video on possible solutions to the housing crisis

    • @comedunken6156
      @comedunken6156 2 года назад

      This!

    • @jeremybiggs8413
      @jeremybiggs8413 2 года назад +14

      Restriction on owning second homes. Rent caps. Lowering the tax threshold for stamp duty. Stopping foreign ownership.

    • @johnsamuel1999
      @johnsamuel1999 2 года назад +1

      @@jeremybiggs8413 rent caps can make the problem worse long term . rent control has already been studied to have a negative effect on long term housing supply

    • @darkmusky9851
      @darkmusky9851 2 года назад +3

      Get rid of the right to buy policy and prevent foreign investors from owning homes

    • @strikersshadow3015
      @strikersshadow3015 2 года назад +1

      Pray that pod sleeping as seen in San Francisco, where you rent a bed to sleep in, with dozens of other people and no space to yourself, is not presented as the solution and does not start creeping into our island.
      I don't know if that would be in line with the laws here but you know our future is absolutely bleak, miserable, and in poverty if it gets established here.

  • @jakejames69
    @jakejames69 2 года назад +7

    I work in construction and i can tell you why the uk hasn’t built enough houses. Its because of greedy investors and contractors who offer such low rates coz they don’t want to see their profit margins drop. Thus leaving us with too much work with too little time and money to complete it efficiently, then we feel over worked and undervalued.

  • @eafortson
    @eafortson 2 года назад +6

    6:39 The narrator says “the UK’s total land mass” but then we Are shown a graphic breakdown of England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿.

    • @thomastallis7245
      @thomastallis7245 2 года назад

      Glad you said it too! The common belief that England and Wales is the whole of the UK, it makes a mockery of statistics.

  • @CM-db5cg
    @CM-db5cg 2 года назад +55

    OK so, I think there's been a little bit of oversimplification of the greenbelts here.
    Most people know it's farms, we like farms, we'd prefer to still have them in the fertile areas around which our cities were historically built.

    • @joefothergill6303
      @joefothergill6303 2 года назад +7

      Completely agree - although farms aren't lush green forests bursting with ecodiversity, they are useful for growing food and as you say are much more attractive than having a load of des reses or apartment block 2 inches from your front door.

    • @andreaslind6338
      @andreaslind6338 2 года назад +6

      I didn't know it was mostly farms, I thought there were some farms and country parks myself.

    • @randellster
      @randellster 2 года назад +8

      It's also good for food security as well and cuts down on emissions related to importing food (which is the alternative).

    • @joefothergill6303
      @joefothergill6303 2 года назад +4

      @@randellster food security is important. You never know what could happen

    • @Croz89
      @Croz89 2 года назад

      @@andreaslind6338 More of the land in the north is less arable and more grazing or forest. Most of the green belt around Manchester are woods, meadows and moorland.

  • @jaredp2598
    @jaredp2598 2 года назад +149

    I can't even imagine how lucky people who expect to inherit a home from their parents must feel, while trying to be a first-time owner in your family is like trying to climb mount fuji with a broken leg

    • @mrcaboosevg6089
      @mrcaboosevg6089 2 года назад +17

      I'm dreading it, what my mother inherited is worth a lot of money but the houses and few old farm buildings are in ruins. She had to pay £100,000 plus just in taxes to keep living in the same place she always has lived, by the time it gets to me and my brother the only way to pay the tax would be to sell the lot which is not something we want to do... My grandad bought it in the 50s for a few hundred quid to farm the land and in the coming decades it'll all be gone thanks to the appalling tax system we have, you're even taxed in death

    • @freyachristina1340
      @freyachristina1340 2 года назад +12

      I hear you. All my family are either living in a housing association area (my grandparents) or council house (my mother.)
      I knew growing up hearing about how much they wished they could have afforded a home of their own. And how my mother feels guilty that she is unable to leave anything to me. This made owning my own home a dream of mine. A place I could look after my grandparents and my mum whenever the time comes.
      Unfortunately it is starting to look like just that - an unattainable dream. I've saved and worked since I was 17 y/o (now 23), I just don't see the point of trying anymore.
      What a time to be alive ay.

    • @bryan7938
      @bryan7938 2 года назад +4

      Inheritance is a gamble because of social care. The average person without a savvy accountant cannot, if they even wanted to, avoid care costs for elderly parents. Our bill, a charge on ma in laws house, was £130K. My disabled sister aged 56 has had a charge put on her house for the cost of a stair lift and wet room. This will only increase so inheritance is not to be relied upon,

    • @naomiwilliams8850
      @naomiwilliams8850 2 года назад +7

      @@freyachristina1340 you're only 23 don't give up, you can do it. Focus on increasing you salary and looking in cheaper areas

    • @tomazou2010
      @tomazou2010 2 года назад +4

      @@freyachristina1340 33 years old, me and my partner are in the process of buying our own home.
      Don't give up. Your income will grow, you're still young.

  • @leonardgibney2997
    @leonardgibney2997 2 года назад +36

    Nowhere does he raise the question of the effect of mass migration. I can't help thinking if you import a population explosion it will exacerbate such problems.

    • @FreeeeFall
      @FreeeeFall 2 года назад +20

      Had to scroll way down the comments to see this elephant in the room. Mass immigration without infrastructure scaling is wreaking untold misery on many fronts.

    • @ukrytykrytyk8477
      @ukrytykrytyk8477 2 года назад +9

      UK is not the only country that has seen mass migration, yet it's the country that can't handle it in reasonable way. Migration is a contributing factor but there are other bigger reasons like land ownership and building approvals mentioned in video. Elsewhere an ordinary citizen can buy plot of land fairly easily and build house on it, hence why in certain countries self-build dominates the market. UK rather prefers stuffing pockets of big developers with money.
      Another stupid idea that I can't understand is the land lease business in UK. You can own a house or flat but you don't own land that it stands on byt rather pay some lord or some big corporation to use that land. Insane!

    • @muhammadsalman7714
      @muhammadsalman7714 2 года назад +4

      Also he did not mention how much corruption money UK imported too. Ask your queen after WW2 when they asked for labour

    • @Matttski
      @Matttski 2 года назад +4

      @@FreeeeFall this isnt en elephant at all. all countries have immigration yet they are managing this better than the uk

    • @video99couk
      @video99couk 2 года назад +3

      Add the returning British people giving up living in Europe because Brexit has made their lives impossible.

  • @stevelam5898
    @stevelam5898 2 года назад +28

    Don't have the data, but I'm positive that Help-to-Buy s driving prices up.

    • @AtticusDenzil
      @AtticusDenzil 2 года назад +1

      every little government initiative to boost purchases drives prices up lol

    • @RamonBalthazar
      @RamonBalthazar 2 года назад +1

      I kinda see what you're saying. Because the goverment is helping, developers put the price up a bit. Yeah, needs data, but makes sense

    • @stevelam5898
      @stevelam5898 2 года назад

      @@nathanwaight Shared ownership schemes is just a scam for people who can't do maths.

    • @stevelam5898
      @stevelam5898 2 года назад

      @@nathanwaight Nah, central banks cause bubbles (the rest are simply scams).

  • @diegolove173
    @diegolove173 2 года назад +5

    I was forced to buy a house in Winchester in 2017 because of my new born at the time , buying that house was the biggest mistake of my life ! The house was overpriced and small ! Luckily I just sold that house and we are moving to Auvergne in France we bought a farm house for 35k with 250 sqm2 and 1 acre of land . What we bought in France the equivalent in Winchester is probably worth 1 or 2m £. House prices in the UK makes no sense at all

    • @diegolove173
      @diegolove173 2 года назад

      @@robfodder5575 I'm French and My wife is English because we are married she has double nationality ! I mean if you want to buy a property in France and beat the 90 day rule it's probably best if you invest in a flat cheaper and you can rent it out in the summer and enjoy in the winter for ski season

  • @thepeff
    @thepeff 2 года назад +36

    I know the used car market wasn't exactly a crisis but it was a major concern for many of us. Dealerships were buying cars back at higher than the customer paid so they could flip them for a lot more

    • @rickrolld1367
      @rickrolld1367 2 года назад

      That's price gouging, wtf

    • @stevelam5898
      @stevelam5898 2 года назад

      They're just inflationary pressures.

    • @rickrolld1367
      @rickrolld1367 2 года назад

      @@stevelam5898 No, that's called price gouging

    • @thepeff
      @thepeff 2 года назад

      It's a shortage so some of it is expected and some of it is taking advantage of people

  • @Grim_Beard
    @Grim_Beard 2 года назад +9

    06:12 Your 'three reasons' is really three _mechanisms_ and ignores the actual _reason_ for the housing crisis. The _reason_ is that every UK government from Thatcher onwards (including 'new' Labour) has aggressively pursued policies aimed at increasing house prices.
    This really only benefits the rich, and has a particularly detrimental effect on the poor, as you note in the video. However, governments have managed to convince home-owners that their house going up in price means that they are getting richer. They're not, because that increase is only realised when you _sell_ your house, but you'll still need somewhere to live - which will be more expensive because house prices keep going up.
    Even if you are 'downsizing' after the kids grow up and move out, so your new smaller house is cheaper than your old larger house, chances are you're going to sink the difference into deposits for your kids' houses - which are more expensive than they should be. Really, it only works once you die: you can leave a more expensive asset to your beneficiaries. However, (1) that doesn't do _you_ any good, and (2) if it still just gets swallowed up by your beneficiaries having to spend more buying their own homes, it's still the same problem - just their problem rather than yours.
    Until people realise that house prices going up is a bad thing, not a good thing, the housing problem is just going to keep getting worse.

    • @maximkostyukovich3913
      @maximkostyukovich3913 2 года назад +1

      And don't we forget that when people die, and their houses are (due to rising house prices) now worth above IHT threshold, the Government starts to lap their value from the inheritance receivers at 40% above threshold.
      But of course those people who are comfortably planning their life, have already established trusts to forgo IHT and shirk their part onto someone else's shoulder.
      Oh, and you have to pay the tax first, then only you can receive the inheritance.
      My former boss, a simple man, who once inherited a modest 2-bed house after his mom's death in London, had to take a bridge loan against his own house (basically second mortgage) from his bank to pay the tax first, and then - only then - could he receive the house, then sell it and pay off the loan... receiving probably only about 3/4 of what the house was worth.

  • @ptptpt123
    @ptptpt123 2 года назад +10

    New money is created when loan is granted. Loans going into real estate means newly created currency goes to real estate. As more currency chases same number of houses, prices go up. Case closed.

  • @shanehill3804
    @shanehill3804 2 года назад +86

    I can't imagine owning a house anymore...

    • @Mrstreet1999
      @Mrstreet1999 2 года назад +8

      The thing is, the only difficult part is getting the deposit, once you’ve got that it’s not difficult, just feel sorry for anyone living down south

    • @Mrstreet1999
      @Mrstreet1999 2 года назад +1

      @@ReD_738 true man, but a good mortgage broker can do wonders, and looking into having a guarantor can also help a lot. It’s difficult dont get me wrong

    • @2241RYAN
      @2241RYAN 2 года назад +7

      I think it's mainly those living in the south . A couple from Essex moved here in Manchester recently. They now live in a very very posh building and the reason why they gave was that it's not that expensive compared to Chelmsford. They can easily afford it as they're used to and both work only as podcast producers lol.
      I really haven't recovered fully from that statement lol

    • @tomralph8540
      @tomralph8540 2 года назад

      @@ReD_738 You should look to buy a cheaper house, or move up North.

    • @ReD_738
      @ReD_738 2 года назад +3

      @@tomralph8540 can't, job and family, very unfortunate

  • @BenNouhan
    @BenNouhan 2 года назад +68

    The biggest step we can take against the crisis? Voting out the party that is purposely not trying to fix it, but enacting just enough superficial policies to make it look like they're not completely ignoring it

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 2 года назад +10

      In short don't vote for the conservative party.
      In the last 10 years they effectively cut the NHS budget by 20%. This means less nurses and less doctors.

    • @mikefish8226
      @mikefish8226 2 года назад +2

      @@paxundpeace9970 Wrong, large scale immigration caused by Labour party policy caused the majority of the housing crisis. Why would voting for the same failed policies make it better? Not that the Tories have done anything to sort out immigration.

    • @peterclarke7006
      @peterclarke7006 2 года назад +8

      So, instead we should do nothing other than keep voting tory, a party that deliberately skews housing policy to pre-existing homeowners because they know that's their core voted demographic?
      Good solution! Well done, you've solved it 😂👍

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 2 года назад +5

      @@mikefish8226 You did even watched the video
      Since Theatcher social housing units decreased from 7 million to less then 2 millions.

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 2 года назад +4

      @Luís Andrade When labour was in power more housing was built.

  • @teoklix
    @teoklix 2 года назад +1

    I quit thinking about buying in London and just left London. I was on a 70k salary with a wife on roughly half so a 6-figure household income.
    Still, we needed a huge deposit that we couldn't find just for a flat and I just didn't think flats were worth the price.
    Especially leaseholds.
    Can't understand how people on lower income will ever be able to buy.

  • @Endeva09
    @Endeva09 2 года назад +5

    01:27 - I’ll take that for £104 no problem!
    01:45 - it’s gone up £9,000 between making the graphic and recording the audio!!

    • @AA-hg5fk
      @AA-hg5fk 2 года назад +1

      Sloppy from TLDR

  • @7DK7DK
    @7DK7DK 2 года назад +17

    Forgot the effect of a net 250K immigrants arriving each year.

    • @mafismathis8012
      @mafismathis8012 2 года назад +2

      it was not ''forgotten'', it was intentional

    • @7DK7DK
      @7DK7DK 2 года назад +1

      @@mafismathis8012 probably

    • @Matttski
      @Matttski 2 года назад +3

      meanwhile germany with net immigration of 2 million coping better than the Uk... how bizzare

    • @chandlerkenworthy3185
      @chandlerkenworthy3185 2 года назад +1

      That sounds like a lot but that is only 0.38% of the UK population each year. Consider as well many immigrants tend to live in 'denser' housing structures (i.e. HMOs or smaller houses with many residents generally). I am not for nor against immigration but you need to put the numbers in perspective.

    • @chrisfmjesusmountsteven6146
      @chrisfmjesusmountsteven6146 2 года назад

      Doesn't matter if it's immigration, ex pats, birth rates. We are an island country. England is running out of fresh water. We don't make our own food and if finance sector move out of London are economy is exposed for the fraud it is. Were walking off a cliff.

  • @bigwings1891
    @bigwings1891 2 года назад +25

    It's also worth mentioning house price increases due to historically low interest rates since the financial crisis.

    • @bartsshorts
      @bartsshorts 2 года назад +1

      no, its simply this, the greatest gen found oil energy, they used the oil to take over the world and multiply like rabbits on heat, then the boomers they bred were the first here, they took everything, then their kids had nothing, the end.

    • @wildsurfer12
      @wildsurfer12 Год назад

      I think it’s safe to say those rates are being rectified fairly quickly…

  • @qwertytheatre1293
    @qwertytheatre1293 2 года назад +1

    Glad to see you back on track with good balanced content

  • @gizmo5601
    @gizmo5601 2 года назад +6

    The main driver for the increase in house prices since 1990 is historically low interest rates. When I bought my first flat in 1990 mortgage interest rates were about 12% whereas now 2-3%. Therefore a buyer can afford to borrow far more so pushing prices up and so increase the multiple of house price to earnings. If interest rates rise significantly in coming years just watch as house price growth falls or prices drop.

    • @Hashterix
      @Hashterix 2 года назад

      Not entirely, because even though interest rates are low, the bank will still not loan you more than about 4x salary. The low interest rates do help to inflate the price, but it's not the driving force behind the insane increase in prices. Remember, the bottom of the market is always what holds up the rest, and the demand to live in the UK (particularly the south east) boomed from the late 90s onwards when Tony Blair opened the door to mass migration. 30k net turned into 300k net, every single person needing a room to live in. In London, a room alone can rent for £600 to £800 a month (slightly less now due to covid reducing demand), and suddenly a standard 4 bedroom house is grossing £3k a month.
      Now let's do the maths. £3k a month or £36k a year makes for a value of £720k when you consider a 5% ROI is a good return (and in London you often expect lower returns than that, 2 or 3%, because people want the stability). That value is entirely propped up by the market rate those rooms achieve, and the fact that as long as you advertise at market rate you are practically guaranteed to fill them within a month.

    • @broadleyboy2
      @broadleyboy2 2 года назад

      @@Hashterix
      Many lenders don’t work on income multiples anymore. They look at “affordability”

    • @Hashterix
      @Hashterix 2 года назад

      @@broadleyboy2 yes they do, I took out a mortgage last year. They also factor in your spending to make sure you'll be able to make the payments but it's still done on a multiple of your income to determine what you can afford.

    • @maximkostyukovich3913
      @maximkostyukovich3913 2 года назад

      @@broadleyboy2 And that is even worse, because their ways of calculating said affordability often deem perfectly capable people = unable to afford.
      They think they're doing a good service to people, protecting them from unaffordable purchases. As a reality they often entomb these same people's legs into renting ground forever.

  • @warmachineuk
    @warmachineuk 2 года назад +25

    Housing supply cannot keep up with demand, therefore boost demand with Help to Buy. Another brilliant Osborne idea from the man who flatlined the economic recovery.

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox 2 года назад +3

      But it can keep up. There are more empty houses than homeless people in the UK. This is not a supply issue at all.

    • @warmachineuk
      @warmachineuk 2 года назад

      @@XMysticHerox The empty house/homeless ratio is related to housing supply/demand... how?

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox 2 года назад +1

      @@warmachineuk Shows that it´s not a simple "not enough supply" issue. There are houses and many houses even in downtown London that are long term vacant.

  • @qwertyqwerty-uc9pz
    @qwertyqwerty-uc9pz 2 года назад +16

    You ignored the Bank of England's money printing which causes inflation.

    • @fuckfannyfiddlefart
      @fuckfannyfiddlefart 2 года назад +4

      Shhhh! Don't talk about about systemic capitalist WELFARE for CAPITALISM.

    • @PabloTBrave
      @PabloTBrave 2 года назад +3

      Really the ECB and BOE have been printing stupid amounts of money none stop since the 2008 financial crash and inflation has struggled to get anywhere near the 2% target until recently

    • @onmytravells9429
      @onmytravells9429 2 года назад +3

      Imagine how quickly interest rates would go up if house prices were counted as inflation....

  • @andrepoon
    @andrepoon 2 года назад +7

    The primary driver of high house prices is “access to capital”… end of story. It’s a common misconception.
    It’s not so much supply and demand.

    • @stevelam5898
      @stevelam5898 2 года назад

      Yes, you can expect that when central banks are printing like there is no tomorrow.

  • @McNab1986
    @McNab1986 2 года назад +15

    Because everything goes up with inflation, including the Governments wages, whilst most people are still stuck earning minimum wage that isn't high enough for the modern world's prices anymore

  • @andrewdavies-rounds5238
    @andrewdavies-rounds5238 2 года назад +3

    I almost never write comments, but this is one topic that I know about. The single most important driver of housing costs is the availability of cheap credit and today as with previous house price booms, we have what is relative to time, very cheap credit. Add in to the mix over last 20 or so years the Buy to Let mortgage, which is used by existing home owners who have access to large piles of cash for deposits and what you end up with soaring house prices.
    So just what would happen if you increase supply? For all of the evidence that we have a housing shortage, there is evidence to contrary, but one good indicator would be the availability of property for sale and look at Rightmove and you will see an abundance of property for sale. But what if supply was increased? Without fundamental change, evidence suggests that prices would not fall and that more than likely, private landlords would simply buy more houses to rent out. In the future you will discover that private landlords will include the retailer John Lewis and Lloyd’s Bank, both of which are entering the buy to let market on a large scale.
    Social housing. Thatchers right to buy did not destroy social housing, many working class people, my parents included had an opportunity to buy the home they lived in from the council. Right to buy created our home owning democracy, which unfortunately has now been somewhat squandered away. Social housing failed because successive governments over 40 years have preferred not to be house builders and local authorities have not opted to provide housing, progressively looking to housing associations and private landlords to provide property.
    Land grabs - compulsory purchasing or grabbing land, taking someone’s property away from them force is ultimately economic suicide for any Government or country, laws and rights of ownership should be respected and this kind of lunacy only belongs in banana republics, see Zimbabwe and Venezuela for how this goes wrong and the consequences.
    So what can be done? Believe it or not, but just a few years ago, house prices were getting cheaper relative to earnings. This was mainly the result of changes to tax treatment levied against private landlords, which made purchasing second properties and renting them far less profitable and as such, far less appealing. Unfortunately as interest rates have fallen by several percent since these tax changes, a landlord with a £150,000 buy to let interest only mortgage has seen an increase in profit of some £3,000 per year, which has made renting out property profitable all over again. So it is super low interest rates that has been the main driver of demand and then from second property owners, landlords and holiday lets that are driving prices upwards and will continue to do so regardless of how many new houses get built.
    As house prices go up, existing home owners have even more wealth in there property to borrow against to buy more property.
    Finally, COVID-19 and working from home is driving some people out of the cities and into the countryside, stamp duty holidays have accelerated the trend, cash support through COVID support schemes (furlough, self employed income support, COVID and bounce back loans) have and are finding there way into property, because it is such a great investment, have you seen how house prices are going up! It is history repeating its self (2000 to 2009) when a number of things happen to create the perfect storm.

    • @kac1160
      @kac1160 Год назад

      Well said! I suppose social housing with no right to buy would solve some of these issues? It seems forcing benefit tenants into private renting is only state funded market manipulation with hideous consequences?

  • @chainepolitique5625
    @chainepolitique5625 2 года назад +20

    In Brussels, there is a similar problem, exacerbated by the fact that the city's periphery is in three different federal regions

    • @NAYRUthunder99
      @NAYRUthunder99 2 года назад +3

      Ah, Belgium

    • @pjani14
      @pjani14 2 года назад

      @@NAYRUthunder99 Love Belgium

    • @THEREALZENFORCE
      @THEREALZENFORCE 2 года назад

      Yeah and other people want to settle down in Monaco.
      Why do people think they (over other people) have a special right to live in the most expensive cities in the world when they cannot afford it.
      So you want all the luxury, comfort, infrastructures, metro, airports, restaurants, cinemas, sportscenters, swimming halls, etc of expensive cities while the middle class lives far from the city in villages.

    • @pjani14
      @pjani14 2 года назад

      @@THEREALZENFORCE people of all incomes need to live and work in these cities.

    • @THEREALZENFORCE
      @THEREALZENFORCE 2 года назад

      @@pjani14 "people of all incomes need to live and work in these cities."
      NO, they don't, they can like me live outside the city and commute to work to the city. Especially in the last 20 years where public transportations is fast and environmental friendly. And nowadays there is also remote work (Télé travail), so many jobs can be done from home.
      You are not entitled to city life if you cannot afford to live there.

  • @miniNinja027
    @miniNinja027 2 года назад +4

    The inequality is staggering really, do they realise the damage this is doing? People are just carrying on as normal when all it boils down to is greed.

  • @chemicalwasted3450
    @chemicalwasted3450 2 года назад +8

    As someone who moved to the UK recently, the housing situation is intolerable. The British live in crappy houses and most don't even realise it because they've never lived abroad. You tell them it's because of the Green Belt and they don't understand or care. Extremely frustrating.

    • @edwardkenworthy7013
      @edwardkenworthy7013 2 года назад

      You know what I do if I find a foreign country intolerable? I go home. Obvious, no?
      And it's not because of the Green Belt, it's because of mass immigration pushing down working class wages and pushing up house prices. Simple supply and demand.

    • @chemicalwasted3450
      @chemicalwasted3450 2 года назад

      @@edwardkenworthy7013 it's both mass immigration and the green belt. Mass immigration increases demand for houses while the green belt reduces supply. You can have one policy or another, but not both. The state is artificially increasing house prices, in other words, which benefits the wealthy and home owners at the expense of everyone else.

    • @edwardkenworthy7013
      @edwardkenworthy7013 2 года назад

      @@chemicalwasted3450 First, the Green Belt doesn't reduce supply, but it does limit growth, and that's a good thing: this is a green and pleasant land, not a concreted over land.
      Second, immigration also suppresses working class wages making it even harder for them to afford to buy a house.
      In other word you are part of the problem and if you find it intolerable you could help solve two problems in one go.

    • @chemicalwasted3450
      @chemicalwasted3450 2 года назад

      @@edwardkenworthy7013 You can keep the land green but it will cost you millions in increased home prices; everything in life is a trade off. As for mass immigration, nothing is stopping the working classes from voting a right wing party into power except their own lack of political will.

  • @kirkwilson3749
    @kirkwilson3749 2 года назад +9

    there isent a housing crisis the problem is most of the new houses that are being built are unobtainable for first time buyers or for working class people and there isent enough low cost housing yet government still build new houses that are expensive and hardy anyone can afford

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 2 года назад

      If hardly anyone can afford them, how do they sell them? Or are they sat empty?

    • @dorkangel1076
      @dorkangel1076 2 года назад

      Isn't that what they said?

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 2 года назад +1

      @@danielwebb8402 there are millions of empty houses that are either too expensive or in the wrong place

    • @kirkwilson3749
      @kirkwilson3749 2 года назад

      @@danielwebb8402 ill give you an example - were i live there is 141 new homes being built all of which are between 294k and 435k to buy - there are 19 affordable housing aswell how is that fair . for the houses ur gunna need at least 45k deposit minimum . the average salary for people in that are isent even 45k if we take the rule of thumb 20% of income thats 5 years just for the deposit ur looking about 30 - 40 years before you own the house its ridiculous

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 2 года назад

      @@kirkwilson3749
      Agree deposits is the problem / pinch point today. Not the monthly mortgage payments.
      You can, and should be, able to get 95% mortgages. So you'd need 15k for a 300k property. Or 5k a year / 400 a month saving for 3 years. That doesn't sound unreasonable to me. Having a 90% LTV for first time buyers is a large hurdle. Completely agree.
      How many homes out of those 141 do you think is "fair" for them to sell at a loss / less than they could? Why is it their job to be a charity? I don't understand why they have to sell any at a government prescribed cost.

  • @exiletsj2570
    @exiletsj2570 2 года назад +35

    Most mortgage companies require a blood sacrifice, before they’ll even look at your application.

    • @mitsterful
      @mitsterful 2 года назад +20

      I saw a great tweet from someone who said 'The bank says I can't afford afford $900 a month for a mortgage, so I pay $1400 a month in rent instead'. I think that beautifully sums up the issue.

    • @tomtimtomtim
      @tomtimtomtim 2 года назад +8

      @@mitsterful What the bank is actually saying is because the buyer doesn't have the necessary cash to convert to equity that the risk level is too high to lend against. Banks are not charities and high risk lending on a wide scale in the housing market partly resulted in the 2008 economic crash. The rental risk isn't necessarily owned by a bank but the landlord who is responsible and therefore offsets his/her own risk on a case by case basis. Ultimately another bank may be in the equation but they don't have sole ownership of the risk and therefore it is safer.

    • @joefothergill6303
      @joefothergill6303 2 года назад +1

      @@mitsterful The person probably couldn't afford $900 per month, which is why the $1400 they are paying in rent unsustainable. Assuming they can't find a cheaper property (unlikely) wouldn't be suprised if they have to get a flat mate or move back in with parents.

    • @alexreeves3817
      @alexreeves3817 2 года назад +2

      My plan is to have kids so I can offer them up to our great housing gods! Haha

    • @mitsterful
      @mitsterful 2 года назад +2

      @@tomtimtomtim You make a good point. However, it still highlights an issue that people pay more for rent than they would a mortgage, making it harder to save for a deposit on a house and being stuck in a renting cycle. People are being told their finances are too risky because they don't have enough, or they're too unstable, so they have to rent instead which costs more and is worse for stability anyway.

  • @tancreddehauteville764
    @tancreddehauteville764 2 года назад +8

    This is really more of an issue for poorer people rather than the middle class, who have parents and/or grand-parents to chip in a few tens of thousands. In any case, this is only a problem because Britain does not have a culture of renting. In the 1970s working class people aimed to find public housing to rent, not homes to buy - that only changed when Thatcher introduced the right to buy rules. Britain's obsession with house buying is causing this problem. The solution is to build more social housing and have better and more regulated private renting.

  • @climbernerd5995
    @climbernerd5995 2 года назад +4

    Very glad you explained how this exacerbates wealth inequality! :)
    You forgot to mention in that section the quite important factor that is that the lower your income the higher percentage of that income is spent just living and so the lower the percentage that can be saved. That is to say not only is a house in your percentile more times your annual income but it is many, many more times your disposable income because food, shelter and utilities are a far higher proportion of your income (often reaching or even exceeding 100%).

  • @Gudha_Ismintis
    @Gudha_Ismintis 2 года назад +27

    A very 'Politically Correct' version of the UK Housing Crisis

    • @Snugggg
      @Snugggg 2 года назад

      whats the politically incorrect detail they missed?

    • @thomasdracup8403
      @thomasdracup8403 2 года назад +9

      @@Snugggg there’s more vacant homes than homeless people. Property developers own the land and have planning permission to build around 1,000,000 new houses but don’t so the prices continue to rise. An increasing number of homes are being bought by landlords, including about 40% of all the social/ counsel houses that were sold off. I think there’s a few more details but I can’t remember them right now.

    • @newavedave77
      @newavedave77 2 года назад +7

      There's also the housing market in London, which has had a knock on effect nationally. Desirable properties in the centre of town have been bought up by Oligarchs, Sheikhs and International Property Investment Syndicates over a number of years. This has fuelled a boom, driving up prices for everyone across the whole city.
      The Covid Lockdown has seen an exodus of Londoners to the regions, able to cash in on the value of their sold London homes, in turn driving up the cost of housing in the places they move to.
      At a time when the economy is on its knees, Estate Agents are quietly having a party. Some people are saying that this will inevitably lead to a burst bubble, but I suspect that the price of property might just remain out of reach for most, as long as the population continues to increase, in proportion to the number of houses being built.

    • @ashyclaret
      @ashyclaret 2 года назад

      @@Snugggg Mass immigration and white flight.

  • @soccerguy325
    @soccerguy325 2 года назад +8

    It's just not the UK. There is a massive housing crisis in the US as well. Homelessness, as well as the price of owning a home, is skyrocketing and wages are dipping, making it harder and harder to afford a house nowadays.

    • @rafalpotasz
      @rafalpotasz 2 года назад +2

      Watched a bit on just one of the many reasons for the US housing issues: large companies, like hedge funds, are buying entire neighbourhoods and are renting them. Typical issues like not fixing things tenants need fixed, suing when a tenant stops paying rent after something hasn't been fixed, etc. Doesn't seem like a great deal 😑
      Some of these areas are bought before normal folks can even view a property, perhaps before they even hear of it.
      If you ask me a lot of property-related issues are getting out of hand. At what point does it become as bad as lets say the issue with insulin, especially in the US? Seems pretty messed up all in all.

    • @soccerguy325
      @soccerguy325 2 года назад +1

      @@rafalpotasz True. Also China and Chinese oligarchs are buying up giant chunks of property in America. There needs to be some kind of legislation against that.

    • @jakecakeandstake
      @jakecakeandstake 2 года назад

      It’s a brilliant system /s.
      Autoenroll pensions, invest in those stable REITs to provide you with income, just so you can’t rent it off yourself.

    • @Zoltan1251
      @Zoltan1251 2 года назад +1

      its everywhere guys.... here from Bratislava, Slovakia.... 800 square feet (70m square), new aparatment, between 250-350k €.... 50 year old ones for 200k €....

  • @UtherV
    @UtherV 2 года назад +7

    Maybe this is wishful thinking, but seeing this as a worldwide problem, perhaps it's time to enforce that housing should not be following the rules of supply and demand.

    • @LeeGee
      @LeeGee 2 года назад +2

      That's what lead to tower blocks under socialism

    • @Capybarrrraaaa
      @Capybarrrraaaa 2 года назад

      Too right. The free-market optimises for financial gain, and it's not like people have much choice to turn-down housing. When you can't 'vote with your wallet', all of the power to decide the price in with the seller. Plus, it just forces this cycle of 'higher house prices -> Less spending power -> harder to buy -> more renters -> Less spending power -> harder to buy...'.
      We've got to cut the problem at its core.

  • @rad8825
    @rad8825 2 года назад +5

    This explains a thing or two. My town used it have a lot of green areas. Over the past decade, all of them have been filled up with tiny, badly put together houses. No improvements have been made to the road network and as a result the town get's grid locked with traffic. If only those houses were any good. I had a displasure of living in a modern build. The house was not even 5 years old at the time, but there were cracks in the walls and all window frames were loose, like you could grab a closed window and shake it. You could always feel draft going around the frames. Newer ones are even worse. A colleague bought one of them, they had 2 burst pipes and a lot of damage in the first 6 months.

    • @oni9637
      @oni9637 2 года назад

      Honestly that disgusts me, I am going to study architecture next year at university, and the construction agency cant even find a balance between sustainability and cost. A Modern house costs a lot less than other types of constructions as the only thing which causes it to be priced up is the price of Steel which is used to make lever arch's, which make it so the roofs are held up without burdening the windows, Modern Houses are honestly a way of people skipping costs and making weaker less sustainable houses, as insulation and cooling is skimped on. Honestly If I had to recommend a house that'd be good for current society, I recommend getting a Victorian times house and just installing an AC Unit. The only thing I can say is, I hate the overpricing of land, as it makes the budget which I can use to design be a lot lower than normal use.

  • @alejandro_mery
    @alejandro_mery 2 года назад +32

    it's really frustrating how those owning fancy houses can prevent new developments because it would devalue their property

    • @Moses_VII
      @Moses_VII 2 года назад +3

      I hate NIMBYism. In America, regulations are the reason for housing crisis. We should allow development no matter what locals say: tower blocks next to your house are ugly, but homelessness is uglier.

    • @yungaterror
      @yungaterror Год назад +1

      It's not just that though, there's no point building houses and not building schools, supermarkets etc

  • @BabaG176
    @BabaG176 2 года назад +16

    Not convinced by your statement that green belts are not 'green' in the context of making room for housing developments. Building new buildings in place of arable land will create more carbon emissions than if that land was left alone, and I am not sure to what extent we can link commuter times with green belts, which will be affected by a myriad of other reasons. Great vid as always!

    • @YasperQuay
      @YasperQuay 2 года назад +1

      Houses are being built on the otherside of the green belts “leapfrogging” thus increasing the commuting times of those who live in those areas, not saying green belts are bad but imo a lot of them have to be re evaluated

    • @joefothergill6303
      @joefothergill6303 2 года назад +3

      Yea that link between commuting times and green belts is entirely spurious. There's many other factors, house prices (so people live further away), and the pollution comment they made is rubbish. A group commuting from Milton Keynes to London by train is far less polluting per person than if the same group drove in from Watford, despite Watford being closer.
      I would say many people rather live near farms so without the greenbelt people would live further out to be closer to the edge of the city thus increasing commuting distances.

    • @gsb5859
      @gsb5859 2 года назад

      @@joefothergill6303 Exactly. What if the price difference wasn’t severe for a 3 bed terrace in London and Milton Keynes? What if people could move a lot easier (less stamp duty and solicitors fees)? Many more ...

    • @Jay_Johnson
      @Jay_Johnson 2 года назад

      @@gsb5859 The train to London is only going to get slower if they add more stops along the way. we'll be wasting more energy starting and stopping.

    • @joefothergill6303
      @joefothergill6303 2 года назад

      @@gsb5859 generally people would want to live close travel time wise to where they work (wfh may likely change this) so presumably more people would live in London if it was more affordable

  • @boostbaa2882
    @boostbaa2882 2 года назад

    I didn’t understand the housing crisis in the UK till I saw this amazing video. You explained everything in detail in just over 10 minutes. Excellent!

  • @bernieshort9774
    @bernieshort9774 2 года назад

    Yes please I would like to see a follow up video on this fascinating subject. Thank you.

  • @cythonr388
    @cythonr388 2 года назад +22

    1:24 "houses only cost 104 pounds" damn man that's pretty cheap...

  • @thesudaneseprince9675
    @thesudaneseprince9675 2 года назад +6

    I don't want to be hasty, but the thing about increased profits from a dominated developing market and a decrease in social housing sounds like intentional conservative policies to me... And the thing about it working to the benefit of the more wealthy and to the detriment of the poor.

    • @loc4725
      @loc4725 2 года назад

      And yet both Labour & the Liberal Democrats did nothing to even attempt to fix the issue.

    • @thesudaneseprince9675
      @thesudaneseprince9675 2 года назад +1

      @@loc4725 I wonder why. I guess with the liberal democrat coilition it was pretty clear who was in charge. But with Labour, I'm not sure, why didn't they do something about it. Also, what do you mean by Labour didn't notion? Social housing is a Labour policy, as far as I'm aware.

    • @gregoryfenn1462
      @gregoryfenn1462 2 года назад

      @@thesudaneseprince9675 No one can get social homes, and they are crazy expensive now anyway

    • @ExploreLearnEnglishWithGeorge
      @ExploreLearnEnglishWithGeorge 2 года назад +1

      yeh, it's about investment capital = people with moneys need to store and grow their moneys so they buy the reliable and steadily appreciate on value = feeding the cycle = more people and investment capital firms invest = more the prices grow. This is happening in every country on Earth. Don't forget that this is problem only for the world poor. The world rich (there's 50 humans who own as much as the poor 50% of all humans on Earth combined) - these guys benefit greatly from this trend...!

    • @loc4725
      @loc4725 2 года назад

      @@thesudaneseprince9675 The Lib Dems' showed their true colours when they were in coalition I'm afraid. Liberal & Democrat but only on the outside...
      You're also right about Labour, but politics has changed. There was a time when all generations, both young _and_ old wanted a better country *for everyone* . That's why even though it was the young that mainly benefited social housing became a feature of the British political landscape. But fast forward to today and those younger generations are now the old and they don't have the same values of those that came before. And most importantly they vote.
      So the problem is twofold: younger generations don't vote in sufficient numbers to matter and the current older generations seem to only think of themselves. And this therefore leads to political parties trying to woo the older, voting generation by giving them fantastic gifts like being able to buy their council home at a massive discount whilst at the same time eschewing the younger, mostly non-voting generation who are left to fend for themselves in an increasingly hostile environment.
      So to answer your question Labour simply adapted to the times. And their MP's were very happy to go along with it.

  • @chrisdeane2990
    @chrisdeane2990 2 года назад +1

    I'd like to see a video on the possible solutions. Also it would be interesting if you did one on the NHS funding crisis. I understand there's quite a lot to unpack there.

  • @danielben-chimol7726
    @danielben-chimol7726 2 года назад

    Great video and really useful background information, highly informative, please do another video on solving the crisis.

  • @abcdefg4761
    @abcdefg4761 2 года назад +34

    No mention of interest rates, which even the Band of England has identified as a major cause?

    • @harrybarrow6222
      @harrybarrow6222 2 года назад +1

      Interest rates are currently very low, compared to historical values.
      I remember a time when they went as high as 17%.
      The flip side is that interest on savings is extremely low. ☹️

    • @fiddlersontheramp5417
      @fiddlersontheramp5417 2 года назад

      Yes!

    • @cashkitty3472
      @cashkitty3472 2 года назад +1

      @@harrybarrow6222 thing is on the 70's housing was reasonable but food was costly . Just swapped what cost more tbh

    • @stevelam5898
      @stevelam5898 2 года назад

      Are you waiting for a 20% basic rate to buy?

    • @abcdefg4761
      @abcdefg4761 2 года назад

      @@stevelam5898 No (though you never know, won't be buying a house for a good 8 years so rate could be anything by then), I just expected it to get a mention

  • @CodyBakken
    @CodyBakken 2 года назад +3

    A video series on this would be advisable, covering issues different nations face, different obstacles to resolving those issues, which systems historically work successfully or not and why, and how issues have arisen to through the system out of balance (assuming it ever existed). Also, please review the largest companies who have a vested interest in the housing market and what lobbying they might have undertaken in different nations to keep the laws in their favor.

  • @joshmorcombe4907
    @joshmorcombe4907 2 года назад +1

    I know in many places another issue is vacant houses, aka houses that are used exclusively as investment properties or shot term rentals (think air bnb) and are therefore taken out of the market, restricting supply. I'd be curious to know how many vacant houses and units there are in the UK
    Edit: i looked it up, the number in November 2020 for houses that had been empty for at least 6 months was almost 270,000. Take that for what you will

  • @Mark-hb9xy
    @Mark-hb9xy 2 года назад +2

    There are too many people crammed into a too small area of land. More people = more housing demand, but supply cannot increase because there is not enough spare land to build on.

  • @sbIvanov
    @sbIvanov 2 года назад +41

    It is a bit strange how it is considered that you are wealthy if you can afford a deposit (5%) on a 240k property (12k)

    • @bleddynwolf8463
      @bleddynwolf8463 2 года назад +40

      i've never met anyone with 12K pounds spear

    • @dalorasinum386
      @dalorasinum386 2 года назад +19

      @@bleddynwolf8463 well a spear of that price would indicate you have a lot of disposable income😂.
      Sorry, I know you meant spare but I couldn’t resist.

    • @aidenl5215
      @aidenl5215 2 года назад +27

      Who’s able to get a 240k house on a 5% deposit? You’re looking 10-15% minimum

    • @sbIvanov
      @sbIvanov 2 года назад +12

      @@bleddynwolf8463 There is a huge difference between spare £12k and £12k savings!
      If I have a £12k spear to throw around, I would suspect to have more than £12k saved.
      Still, £12k would not be a hard number to reach in a family of two as long as they work ANY job that guarantees 40 hours a week (which is the actually problem in the UK).

    • @gregoryfenn1462
      @gregoryfenn1462 2 года назад +13

      Lenders rarely offer the 5% scheme, they think you're a credit risk. Or they offer you a crazy expensive interest rate for it. But yes, if you can save £12k while spending all your money on rent and council tax and living costs, you are very wealthy and the system is rigged in your favour to leech money off everyone else. It's a very subtle form of legal serfdom

  • @grevberg
    @grevberg 2 года назад +10

    This sounds good! In Sydney it's 20 times the average income.

  • @mattwest4326
    @mattwest4326 2 года назад

    Yes to the solutions episode!!
    A solution I came up with a while ago (something similar has since been proposed by MPs) was that some new homes that are built could be sold at a heavily discounted rate, for instance, 50% of true value with state-backed 95% deposits. First-time buyers could then live in these starter homes, paying down their mortgage, and when they were ready to move on they could sell the house but only for 50% of true market value and only to another first-time buyer or the state via a buyback scheme. Essentially this proposal would create a savings account you could live in.

  • @squirrelinstructor6075
    @squirrelinstructor6075 2 года назад +4

    This is utter bollocks. The reason houses are so expensive is because interest rates are so low. If you cannot get this simple fact into your thinking you have no idea. And to slag off the green belt as environmentally bad is utterly ill informed.

    • @jackwright7014
      @jackwright7014 2 года назад

      To me the greenbelt also keeps areas looking nice. I don't want concrete everywhere

  • @Knightfelled
    @Knightfelled 2 года назад +6

    People living with their parents into late 30s or 40s will become the norm, however as a home owner myself I personally think people who own their own property and decide to buy another house solely to just rent out, I've heared of cases where some people own 3-4 other houses solely to rent them out and I think that just takes away an opportunity for a first time buyer

    • @jamesavenell2368
      @jamesavenell2368 2 года назад

      Of course you are correct but this is a country of free enterprise & people lap it up. How can we change that mentality when the controllers of society are that way inclined ?

    • @shadyblackbird7609
      @shadyblackbird7609 2 года назад +2

      That's capitalism just don't be poor simple solution

    • @THEREALZENFORCE
      @THEREALZENFORCE 2 года назад

      @Jord Rich : like in the French movie Tanguy :-)

  • @Tehevilcookieable
    @Tehevilcookieable 2 года назад +3

    I remember in the 2000's there was a scandal and subsequent crackdown around those darn kids subverting their taxes by living in garden sheds. To me, this sounds like a great solution.
    Give every garden of a decent size automatic planning rights for a 1-2 tenant timber bungalow with a cap on the rent price and the problem would take care of itself.

  • @farceadentus
    @farceadentus 2 года назад +6

    I bought a 3 bed flat with a garden for £19k up norf. Leaving London. Best thing I ever did!

    • @alexc7367
      @alexc7367 2 года назад +1

      how far north did you go lad, fuckin Greenland?

    • @mdo
      @mdo 2 года назад

      I'm sorry, what? Near Cambridge that amount of money is not enough for a deposit.

    • @farceadentus
      @farceadentus 2 года назад

      @@alexc7367 Tyne and Wear!

    • @farceadentus
      @farceadentus 2 года назад

      @@mdo I know 🙂

  • @adrikhankant6170
    @adrikhankant6170 2 года назад +13

    This is the TLDR I liked, explaining me things in deep without bias, well done guys, really good comeback

    • @thomastallis7245
      @thomastallis7245 2 года назад +1

      Without bias?
      Everything said on this clip was about England and Wales, yet it's being spoken about as if the problem is UK wide. Every statistic in this clip, along with the audio is wrong in this sense.