Last week, I wrote an article on the plight of the Wellingborough
20 something’s often referred to by the press as ‘Generation Rent’. Attitudes
to renting have certainly changed over the last twenty years and as my analysis
suggested, this change is likely to be permanent. In the article, whilst a
minority of this Generation Rent feel trapped, the majority don’t – making
renting a choice not a predicament. The Royal Institution of Chartered
Surveyors (RICS) predicted that the private rental sector is likely to grow substantially
by 1.8m households across the UK in the next 8 years, with demand for rental
property unlikely to slow and newly formed households continuing to choose the
rental market as opposed to buying.
However,
my real concern for Wellingborough homeowners and Wellingborough landlords
alike, as I discussed a couple of months ago, is our mature members of the
population of Wellingborough. In that previous article, I stated that the
current OAP’s (65+ yrs in age) in Wellingborough were sitting on £898.8m of
residential property ... however, I didn’t talk in depth about the ‘Baby
Boomers’, the 50yr to 64yr old Wellingborough people and what their properties
are worth – and more importantly, how the current state of affairs could be
holding back those younger Generation Renters.
In
Wellingborough, there are 3,465 households whose owners are aged between 50yrs
and 64yrs and about to pay their mortgage off. That property is worth, in
today’s prices, £682.2m. There are an additional 3,194 mortgage free Wellingborough
households, owned by 50yr to 64yr olds, worth £628.9m in today’s prices,
meaning...
Wellingborough Baby Boomers and Wellingborough
OAP’s are sitting
on £2.21bn worth of Wellingborough Property
These
Wellingborough Baby Boomers and OAP’s are sitting on 11,224 Wellingborough
properties and many of them feel trapped in their homes, and hence I have dubbed
them ‘Generation Trapped’.
Recently,
the English Housing Survey stated 49% of these
properties owned by the Generation Trapped, as I have dubbed them, are
‘under-occupied’ (under-occupied classed as having at least two bedrooms more
than needed). These houses could be better utilised by younger families, but
research carried out by the Prudential suggest in Britain it’s estimated that
only one in ten older people downsize while in the USA for example one in five
do so.
The
growing numbers of older homeowners who want to downsize their home are often
put off by the difficulties of moving. The charity United for all Ages,
suggested recently many are put off by the lack of housing options, 19% by the
hassle and cost of moving, 14% by having to declutter their possessions and 14%
by family reasons such as staying close to children and grandchildren.
Helping
mature Wellingborough (and the Country) homeowners to downsize at the right
time will also enable younger Wellingborough people to find the homes they need
– meaning every generation wins, both young and old. However, to ensure
downsizing works, as a Country, we need more choices for these ‘last time
buyers’.
Theresa
May and Philip Hammond can do their part and consider stamp duty tax breaks for
downsizers, our local Council in Wellingborough and the Planning Dept. should
play their part, as should landlords and property investors to ensure Wellingborough’s
‘Generation Trapped’ can find suitable property locally, close to friends,
family and facilities.
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