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Gary's weekly views
Each week an article by Gary has appeared in the Plympton Plymstock and Ivybridge News in South West Devon. The articles are published here
HOUSE PRICES
I used to think that when your children were eighteen they would be off your hands and freedom would come crashing in once again. Not so! Many similarly aged friends report to us their unexpected family experience: they keep coming back.
It is being talked about as a growing social trend – more kids are leaving home at a later date, and finding opportunity to come back to the parental bosom whenever they can.
One of the reason for this tendency is spiralling house prices. The latest figures tell us that average South Hams property prices are a staggering £280,000 and the Plymouth average is £161,500. In Plympton and Plymstock prices are probably on a par with the South Hams. So where does the next generation live? How can they afford to buy without parental assistance? Even for young professionals the property ladder is out of reach.
Young families should aspire to own their own homes. They need to make their own nest. Villages need all sorts of ages and incomes to keep them alive. Renting is fine to start with, but over 80% still want to own their own homes recognising that the acquisition of capital is a laudable aim, bringing security and responsibility for most of us.
Our region is especially challenged with more and more outsiders, some retired, some still at work but commuting large distances queuing up to buy in Devon and Cornwall, keeping our prices high.
So the affordability gap grows year on year. Unless there is a massive market correction – i.e. house prices falling significantly - it is a problem that policy makers will have to address.
In part the answer is supply – more houses will have to be built, but we dare not lose too much of our precious countryside. Sherford, if it gets the go ahead will ease the situation a little. Housing associations building affordable part buy, part rent, properties will help. But the problem with shared ownership is that most people want to own their entire house, understandably.
We have to go further. We need a government-led radical approach to tax and planning rules to help crack this problem. We need to consider a new form of legal tenure that will help keep houses for local people only.
posted by Nigel on Monday, April 30, 2007

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