House Price Increases Create 'Generation Rent'
04-19-2014
A third of adults under the age of 40 say they have no realistic chance of owning their own home, despite Help to Buy schemes.
Sale and rent signs are displayed by estate agents
Video: House Price Increases Create 'Generation Rent'
By Siobhan Robbins, Sky News Reporter
The booming housing market is causing a generation of young people to become increasingly pessimistic about their chances of getting on the property ladder, according to a new study.
Halifax's 'Generation Rent' report found that despite the launch of schemes like Help to Buy to give a boost to people with small deposits, 36% of 20 to 45-year-olds felt they have no realistic prospect of owning their home in the next five years.
Around half of those polled in England, Scotland and Wales agreed Britain will become a nation of renters in the next generation and 20% of people aged 23 to 27 said they have no desire to own their own home.
Houses in London
A fifth of people surveyed said they had no desire to own their own home
Caroline Hill, 23, told Sky News she would rather rent than buy.
"I can see myself being able to buy in the future but I'm just really not interested in doing so," he said.
"My parents have always been renters and I think that has had a big effect on the way I feel about it."
Danny Palmer, 27, is frustrated the market is running away from him.
"I think it's going to be really difficult for me to get onto the property ladder purely because rent these days is taking up about 40% of my salary, and that's before bills, living costs and anything else," he said.
Estate Agents
Estate agents say high prices mean potential buyers are moving into rentals
Halifax mortgages director Craig McKinlay, said: "We may be heading towards the point where the aspiration to own a nice home will be replaced by the aspiration to simply live in one.
"It seems that people are now beginning to accept a lifetime of renting and this would not only change the way the property ladder looks in the future, it could even bring into question whether or not it will exist at all for some people."
The report warned that any future collapse in the number of first-time buyers - the "life blood" of the housing market - will have a knock-on impact on people trying to move up the property ladder.
If some existing home owners are unable to trade up because of a lack of potential buyers for their property, the market will be brought to a standstill, the report warns.
Woking estate agent Yassar Latif, said: "People who were thinking of buying, but have been let down by the rise in prices, have moved towards rentals now."
The Government has said that Help to Buy and plans to build more houses should ease the problem. But despite this, only around 30% of the people polled believed Help to Buy was working.