Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Terry Murden's blog

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 02 September 2008
WELL, the government had to do something. And removing the burden of stamp duty from thousands of homebuyers will be seen as a good thing. Except that it will not make that much difference.
Already City commentators and the Council of Mortgage Lenders have said the effect will be minimal. One unimpressed analyst said simply: "So what?"

Raising the threshold for a year may at least prompt some waverers to leap into the market, but it
will do little for those buying or selling new-built properties as it is already quite common for housebuilding companies to pay a buyer's stamp duty as part of a package of incentives.

As the suspension of duty only applies to property up to £175,000 it also leaves those buying even a modest two-bedroomed apartment with a sizeable bill.

The other assistance offered by yesterday's announcement from the UK Communities Secretary Hazel Blears is also of dubious benefit. Shared equity, help for those facing repossession and more investment in affordable housing are already available in Scotland, and were introduced to varying degrees by the previous regime. The Scottish housing market has not suffered as badly as the rest of the UK, but the fact that these measures have not stopped the decline or stagnation in the market north of the border shows they are having a limited impact.

The problem for governments north and south is that they cannot intervene too much in the housing market - and why should they? - and yet tinkering with taxes does not appear to have the desired affect.

Rampant house price inflation - notwithstanding recent falls - together with the tightening of the mortgage market remain beyond these new measures. The former will correct itself through supply and demand while the latter requires liquidity and confidence to return to the banking system.

While the current housing log-jam is painful those caught up in it, a correction was long overdue to bring the market to its senses. House prices and lending criteria have been well out of kilter with incomes for some time. When lenders are offering six times income it is time to call a halt. And we have reached that station.

Lenders now require greater security from borrowers. And so they should. When buyers, sellers and lenders return to proper affordability measures then it will no longer be necessary for governments to step in at all.

Terry Murden is Business and City Editor, Scotland on Sunday




Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 02 September 2008 11:33 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Weblogs
 
1

Ian on 2-wheels,

Edinburgh 02/09/2008 14:05:08
A voice of reason. I am fed-up reading about the panic amongst people who think that because house prices may have dropped they are less well off than they used to be. This is a British delusion. House price inflation is not a good thing. I would like to see an economy where my children have a reasonable chance of affording to buy a house. My own house has become valuable, but that is of no use to me because I cannot sell it - as I use it for living in! Rising house prices is not a recipe for prosperity, but even the Government seem to have joined in the national pretence that it is.
2

Evan Owen,

Snowdonia 02/09/2008 15:17:38
Anything to do with the nationalised Northern Crock?
3

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 02/09/2008 22:51:54
Sound common sense. Despite Brown's tinkering the market will have its own way. House price rises have been seen as a source of easy money and as a result of programmes on TV hyping the benefits along with careless lending and easing of base rates the "wealth" of the country has increased. But it hasn't of course as there was nothing much underwriting this "wealth" than a pure notional increase in value.

No tangible evidence of wealth except more badly built houses flung up to meet demand and now that industry and engineering have been squeezed out all we can fall back on is service industries in the main. This is OK as part of balanced economy but thanks to the above factors and greed all round in boardrooms and in the City we now have this disgusting mess. Brown has been as culpable as anyone else in creating it and seeks to continue the old feel-good factor. He still hasn't caught with the reality that the bubble does have to burst and things will get pretty horrible for a couple of years. That's a couple years he doesn't have, hence this cynical attempt to pump up the market and so prolong the agony.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.