Tuesday, 6 July 2021

The Myth of UK Housing Shortage Exposed by the Bank of England

 Guest comment piece by Nan Tewari


Given the unconscionable volumes of building going on in the borough (and elsewhere) we might hope the numbers of homeless families would be falling.  Yet this is far from being the case.  

The housing shortage rhetoric is somewhat at odds with the content of this article. It may well be time for public policy to recognise that having a home must be, first and foremost, a human right.  Housing as just an asset should be coming way down the list of what is acceptable in a civilised society when so many remain without a secure roof over their head.  

 Extracts from Posiitve Money's coverage of a Bank of England  LINK
If we look at the data, [...]. Housing stock levels have consistently risen at a higher rate than population growth even in the past couple of decades, and even in London. So, according to the laws of supply and demand, if houses were a simple consumer good, prices should have fallen – obviously not the case.

In the 1930s a typical three bed house was just 1 and a half times the average annual salary. By 1997 the average house price was 3.6 times the average salary. But in just twenty years that has more than doubled to nearly 8 times, and in London an ‘affordable’ home is 13 times first-time buyers’ salaries.


3 comments:

  1. Our economy is built on house prices, we knew that deep down didn't we?

    In Brent and many other Labour boroughs, the gulible councillors (like Butt and Tatler to name the biggest mugs) believe everything the Tories and their mate tell us about prices being driven by the (imaginary) housing shortage - there are loads of properties if you can afford them, then of course so many are retained for rentals. So many are bought from abroad as appreciating balance sheet assets, a bit like the Unisys builings at Bridge Park, I wonder how much he's borrowed against those over the years.

    What happens when the bubble bursts, that's right, we bail the banks out again.

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  2. Echo the previous comment ... 'In Brent and many other Labour boroughs, the gulible councillors (like Butt and Tatler to name the biggest mugs) believe everything the Tories and their mate tell us about prices being driven by the (imaginary) housing shortage' Well said

    Just to add are they getting any perks out of this?

    Whatever happened to the toykinton library building?

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  3. An excellent point, Nan! Thank you for bringing it to our attention.

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