During the last part of
the 20th Century and into the 21st, the UK has embarked on a gigantic social,
financial and structural experiment. It
replaced an Empire and then a web of international trading where manufactures
were the critical element with a financial system based on property in which
manufactures became secondary and almost incidental.
This would take a large
book to deal with and that would be a summary.
A brief post can be only a minimal and very rough sketch. But trust me; I'm a blogger, have lived
through and have been a part of it.
Also, it is an interest to scratch around the past in search of what has
gone and been forgotten.
Our recent severe weather
has provoked a media storm of coverage, anxieties and the usual political
posturing. In the UK almost all of it
has centred on damage to property, how it should be protected at almost any
cost and the relevant valuations. At one
time much the greater interest would have been what was going on at sea and in
the ports, the damage to property would have been taken for granted as part of
the risks of life.
Also, recently in the
media has been the business of those in the private rental sector altering
their approach in response to financial changes. They no longer want to be a sub-set of social
housing with tenants on benefits, their perceived need is tenants who either
pay up or can be removed.
Many of the owners of
rental properties depend on extensive credits which has to be covered. The way
this private sector seems to have worked is that those in the business have
taken on highly leveraged borrowing to fund the expansion needed for continuing
coverage of liabilities. Accordingly,
rentals have needed to rise more than ordinary inflation.
This has begun to impact
more extensively on the freehold private housing market in that rental
companies are now more active in that field, helping in the South East at least
to add to the demand in such a way that is an element in the well above
inflation price rises there.
But the strange way we
regard inflation in the UK is that we seem to think that a high level of rising
prices are economically a good thing, in that necessarily they are popular with
existing owners, notably renters needing increased asset values. That is just another potentially damaging
kind of inflation is almost a heresy among our leaders and financiers.
Looking around a variety
of locations known to me over the last fifty years, I am seeing price increases
of between 60 to 80 times face value. A
property I could buy at near three times salary in 1962 would now need seven to
eight times salary if in the same sort of job and its kind ten or more times in
the hotter spots.
Another contrast is the
annual rentals on some properties are now greater than the cash price of the
then freehold property some thirty to forty years ago. As for leasehold this is now another world
and "social housing" is an even stranger world. We are now at a point where to be in social
housing now is regarded popularly as conferring the equivalent of ownership for
life and then to be bequeathed to family.
It is assumed also that
housing is something to be financially supported by the state and that all
sorts of tax breaks and hidden benefits occur.
Many so called "holiday cottages" are rarely rented to holiday
makers and many "second homes" are not much lived in. They have become "investments" that
offer ways and means of avoiding tax.
The recent scandals of Parliamentary expenses largely turn on property
dealing.
A consequence is that a lot
of housing is removed from housing needs and to add to this a great deal is
under occupied by any sort of comparison with the longer past. At present there is extensive and expensive
development going on in London which may well remain largely unoccupied being
seen as a hedge for foreign investors on asset values needing a home for flight
capital.
When you add other
elements into the equation it becomes more difficult. Firstly is that recently we have had more
housing space than almost any people in history although that might now be
changing. Then there is the notion that
more people means more money.
This may be true in total,
but it may be untrue in terms of mean incomes and especially if housing costs
continue to escalate at this rate driven by all sorts of funny money. This will entail rather lower amounts of real
disposable income and declining rapidly.
This will affect consumption another prop of our financial system at
present.
It is possible that this
great experiment will fail and the stresses are beginning to show. It is possible that it must fail because it
depends on impossible assumptions, almost dreams and that at some stage
difficult decisions will be needed that will be avoided.
We hope that the money
will not run out because our financiers will go on creating it in a way that
will last forever. But if this, along
with government spending means that the incentive to save is removed so few can
or will save the fewer and fewer will be able to afford either rentals or
purchase.
And there might be no way
out of the mess because the money flood has blocked all the routes.
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