The Tories'
policy for what has been called “Ryanair Housing”, whereby
builders will be allowed to cut corners, so as to produce slightly
cheaper houses was announced several months ago. With an election
coming, and the housing crisis getting worse, Cameron has proposed to
double the number of these sub-prime houses, from 100,000 to 200,000.
Yet, despite the time they have had to try to think this policy
through, when he appeared on Murnaghan, at the weekend, Tory
Chairman, Grant Shapps was unable to say how the scheme would be
financed. Rather like the way his leader waffles, avoids and evades
ever answering any question from Ed Miliband during PMQ's, Shapps was
left floundering to provide any response to what is a fairly
straightforward and important question. Now wonder the Tories want
to avoid appearing on any televised leaders debates. They have got
so used to just putting up any old flannel.
I've dealt
with what is wrong with the scheme months ago when it was announced.
Sub-standard houses, built by the builders being allowed to cut
corners in the same way that Victorian terraced housing was
jerry-built over a hundred years ago, leading to health and social
problems, and creating the urban slums that had to be pulled down in
the 1960's; houses built on brownfield sites where no one wants to
live and so on.
The simple
answer to Murnaghan's question, is that the Tories propose that local
councils pick up the tab. That is the same local councils that have
already been the hardest hit by the Tories austerity policies. Local
Councils are expected to forgo the income they they would receive
from any development, in the shape of 106 Agreements, the requirement
for builders to provide local amenities and so on, wherever they
create additional need from building new developments.
The saving
of 20% on the average house bought by a first-time buyer is around
£48,000. Multiplied up by the 200,000 houses the Tories are
proposing under the scheme, and the loss to Councils is then around
£9.6 billion, which is quite a chunk of change to lose following all
of the other cuts. The government are not proposing to compensate
Councils for this loss of income. But, there are other obvious
problems with the scheme.
As one
mortgage expert pointed out, when builders have obtained this 20%
reduction in their costs, there is no way that it can be guaranteed
to be passed on to home buyers. Builders could just inflate their
costs by 20%, so as to make out that they had then given a 20%
reduction. In those parts of the country, where house prices are
falling, because excessive house prices have already killed off
potential demand, that will not happen, due to competition, but its
in those areas that builders will have little interest in building,
which means the excessive prices will continue. In areas like
London, builders will have little problem inflating their costs, so
as to simply add this 20% gift from the local council to their
profits.
As far as
mortgages are concerned, the 20% discount will make little
difference. Mortgage providers will base any mortgage offer on the
discounted price, not the price before the 20% discount. So, a
£100,000 house that currently requires a 20% deposit, of £20,000,
becomes an £80,000 house that requires a deposit of £16,000 – a
reduction of £4,000 in the deposit required, not £20,000. Given
that many first-time buyers have difficulty raising the minimum
deposit, this small difference is unlikely to change anything much.
The real problem is that house prices have just been inflated to
ridiculously high levels. They need to fall by much more than this
measly 20% to return to any kind of level of sanity.
According to a new report by Shelter, if house prices had kept pace with wages, first time buyers would
be paying more than 40% less for a house than they are currently.
This is another consequence of the totally mangled and distorted
economy that has been created as a result of high debt, and low wages
created since the late 1980's by Thatcher, referred to recently,
whereby, for example, the payment of Housing Benefit, to workers on
these low wages, now accounts for a third of the total income for
workers. The annual wage bill is around £54 billion, whilst Housing
Benefit alone accounts for £27 billion a year! Take that Housing
Benefit away, and either wages in Britain would have to rise by
around 50% on average, or else rents would have to be slashed to a
level that the Buy To Let landlords would go bust on a huge scale,
causing house prices to be literally decimated, i.e. fall to near a
tenth of current levels.
That is
before, interest rates inevitably rise. One Tory Minister on TV
recently commented that in many parts of the country there was no
housing bubble, because people in those areas were in negative
equity. There is no logical connection between the two. If I took
out a 95% mortgage – let alone a 125% mortgage! - on a £250,000
house, i.e. a mortgage of £237,500, the fact that the house is now
valued at only £200,000, or £37,500 less than my outstanding
mortgage, does not mean that the house is not still massively
overpriced, and along with other similarly overpriced houses, is
still not in a bubble. It only means that all of the measures the
government has thrown at trying to prevent that bubble from bursting,
has succeeded, so far in limiting the fall to this £50,000 drop. It
does not at all mean that the houses are not still 40% overprices, or
that as with any bubble, when it bursts, the reversion to the mean
will result in prices falling by much more than that.
In Spain,
prices have fallen by around 50%, in the last five years, and are
still falling. There are many people in negative equity, but that
doesn't mean that the houses are not still significantly overpriced,
having risen over the last 20 years by ridiculous amounts. According
to an e-mail newsletter I received recently from Spain's largest
estate agent, Idealista, there are still around 1.5 million empty
homes waiting to be sold. In valencia, 90% of the homes waiting to
be sold are being sold by banks! That shows the extent of the
banking crisis in Europe. Its only because these banks continue to
be pumped full of liquidity by the ECB that they can continue to hold
these proporties on their books at these fantasy prices. But it
doesn't change the fact of their underlying insolvency.
But, in
Britain, house prices have not yet even gone through the necessary
price crash that they have experienced in the US, Ireland, and Spain.
Its coming, and when it comes it will be huge, and the impact on the
banks will be huge too.
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