New analysis from JRF using a mortgage
interest rate of 5.5%, which assumes that mortgage rates remain
at their current high rate, finds that:
-
An additional 120,000 households,
or 400,000 people (roughly the population of Cardiff) [1],
will be pulled into poverty over the coming year
[2]
-
750,000 households, or 2.4 million
people, buying with a mortgage currently live in poverty
[3]
-
The poverty rate for households
buying with a mortgage would increase from 10% in 2020/21 to
12%. This is the highest the poverty rate has been for this
group in a decade
-
These households would see their
monthly housing costs increase to 54% of monthly income, over
half their income, up from 38%
In cash terms this is a monthly
increase of £250, from £610 a month to £860 a month. People on
low incomes with mortgages will also be facing rising food and
energy costs, in addition to their increased monthly housing
costs.
Because of higher mortgage rates, as
people remortgage or remain on variable or tracker mortgages JRF
is warning of the following:
-
An increase in demand for private
renting as households struggle to access mortgages or have to
sell their mortgaged properties
-
A rise in rents as demand
increases, in addition to the rocketing rents for new
lets
-
Even if the housing market largely
returns to ‘normal’, where mortgage rates fall back to below
3% and house prices are similar to current levels, lending
criteria could be stricter, making it more difficult for
first-time buyers to get on the property
ladder
JRF says the Government must act in
response to this unfolding crisis and learn the lessons of the
past by:
-
Protecting mortgage holders likely
to face the most acute financial distress, so they can remain
in their home
-
Providing emergency support to
private renters, so they can afford their housing
costs
-
Maintaining housing transactions
so that the market doesn’t shut down, by keeping first time
buyers in the market and expanding the capacity of councils
and housing associations to buy homes
-
Setting out an overall goal of
achieving a managed correction in house prices
Darren Baxter-Clow, Senior Policy
Adviser at JRF, says:
“The Government should rightly be
concerned about the looming mortgage crisis and the crisis
already being faced by private renters. Support must be targeted
at mortgage holders in poverty and those who could be pulled into
poverty by their housing costs who risk losing their homes,
along with private renters who are already facing rapidly rising
costs.
“However, any support must not just
prop up a broken housing market. Exorbitant house prices have
shut millions out of homeownership for decades and trapped too
many in an unaffordable, insecure, and poor quality private
rented sector. Any crisis support must end the current cycle of
boom and bust and work towards a healthier and more equitable
housing system”.
Notes to Editor
-
https://www.ons.gov.uk/visualisations/censuspopulationchange/W06000015/
-
This assumes 40% of households
buying with a mortgage are impacted by increasing mortgage
interest rates over the coming year, including those who are on
a standard variable rate or tracker mortgage and those whose
mortgage fix has come to an end. (See Fig 1: Fixed Rate Period
of Outstanding Mortgages https://builtplace.com/market-commentary-july-2022/)
-
https://www.jrf.org.uk/report/uk-poverty-2022