Welcome to European Tribune. It's gone a bit quiet around here these days, but it's still going.
Display:
Huge increase in those forced to default on mortgages payments - Independent Online Edition > Mortgages
Buyers are being forced to borrow record amounts of money to finance their property purchases
Number of people defaulting on their payments this year has doubled to 77,000 each month
Fears are growing of a dramatic increase in the number of houses that are repossessed By Martin Hickman, Consumer Affairs Correspondent Published: 11 July 2007

Britain faces a mortgage crisis with payment arrears rising sharply as 18 million homeowners struggle to meet the fifth rise in interest rates in less than a year.

It is being predicted that high earners who have stretched themselves to buy a home will join less prosperous social groups in experiencing problems as they juggle finances to adjust to rises in monthly payments.

Research suggests that twice as many borrowers as last year have missed mortgage payments in the past six months. A website, MoneyExpert.com said that, while 36,000 borrowers a month fell into arrears last year, this year that figure will be 77,000.

Fears that homeowners are vulnerable to rate rises intensified when the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) said yesterday that first-time buyers were borrowing a record 3.37 times their income and other buyers just over three times.

by Fran on Wed Jul 11th, 2007 at 12:18:37 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Decades of mismanagmement of the housing situation in the UK is now coming home to roost. The labour party ignored the growing crisis because it didn't want to alienate a property owning middle class and now finds itself facing a revolt among the under 35s who perceive it as toadying to the comfortably smug.

And all their prescriptions about affordable housing fall by the wayside if any new housing stock is snapped up by buy-to-rent owners who get better mortgage deals than those who want to live in them. Trouble is that too many MPs are fairly wealthy multiple home owners who'd never vote against their own personal financial interests.

keep to the Fen Causeway

by Helen (lareinagal at yahoo dot co dot uk) on Wed Jul 11th, 2007 at 07:59:14 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Thatcher 1987: "You can buy your own council houses - freedom!"

Everyone 2007: "That's nice. But we can't actually afford the mortgage on them. So - er - not such a good idea, actually."

by ThatBritGuy (thatbritguy (at) googlemail.com) on Wed Jul 11th, 2007 at 09:05:24 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Yes, but we all know that the tories did a basic accountaing trick on the sale of council houses, claiming that depreciation set in over the years of tenure. So that effectively houses worth in excess of (at that time) of £60,000 - 90,000 were given away for sums anywhere between £5,000 - 15,000.

Who is going to resist what was effectively free money ? Which, after all, is what an awful lot of thatcherite policy amounted to, a massive bribing of the electorate to allow them to screw the poor in the long term.

And that basic fraudulence is what Blair admired and which is now biting Brown in the bum.


keep to the Fen Causeway

by Helen (lareinagal at yahoo dot co dot uk) on Wed Jul 11th, 2007 at 09:34:05 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Display:

Occasional Series