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Previously on "Radical proposals to the UK property market"

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  • Zero Liability
    replied
    Whatever they've suggested, the govt will ignore it, say "that's nice dear" and keep it BAU.

    Leave a comment:


  • DimPrawn
    replied
    I can afford my bedsit above the kebab shop. Therefore property IS affordable.

    Leave a comment:


  • LondonManc
    replied
    Take out foreign investment and the London property bubble bursts, net result of which is we crash as a country. Massive negative equity and no real prospect of recovery. Build more houses in New London and flog em to the foreigners as they won't realize there are two Londons before it's too late.

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    Just one radical proposal is needed - no mortgage lending unless it's on the basis of 25% deposit and no more than 3 annual verified earnings AFTER tax.

    Leave a comment:


  • SpontaneousOrder
    replied
    Gold standard. Problem solved.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lightwave
    replied
    Originally posted by alreadypacked View Post
    For London, the foreign buyers paying cash is the norm.
    Not just London, it's a major capital inflow across the UK.
    The flip side of the current account deficit requires capital inflow.....

    Leave a comment:


  • PurpleGorilla
    replied
    Radical proposals to the UK property market

    Originally posted by alreadypacked View Post
    For London, the foreign buyers paying cash is the norm.
    **** London!

    Last edited by PurpleGorilla; 23 November 2015, 14:54.

    Leave a comment:


  • BrilloPad
    replied
    Why do we have to have complex rules? Lets just ban foreigners(non UK passport holders) from owning UK property. With a forced sale within 5 years.

    As said above though, it will not happen. As it will kill the great economic Ponzi scheme.

    Leave a comment:


  • alreadypacked
    replied
    Originally posted by PurpleGorilla View Post
    All sounds good, but nothing beats...

    SENSIBLE LENDING!
    For London, the foreign buyers paying cash is the norm.

    Leave a comment:


  • PurpleGorilla
    replied
    All sounds good, but nothing beats...

    SENSIBLE LENDING!

    Leave a comment:


  • MrMarkyMark
    replied
    I agree with a lot of this.

    However, if they, really, fixed everything they will break our, so called, economic "recovery".

    So they won't.

    Leave a comment:


  • Danglekt
    replied
    that depends - I live not far from liverpool were you can buy a terrace house for £30k because demand is so low.

    Leave a comment:


  • Martin@AS Financial
    started a topic Radical proposals to the UK property market

    Radical proposals to the UK property market

    As proposed by the think tank - The Bow Group

    Cut and pasted from their website:

    •Building more houses, despite being the solution most widely touted, is not the answer to the UK’s housing crisis. In the face of infinite demand from a global elite who see UK housing as an investment market, building more houses will have no downward effect on prices.

    •Investment buyers provoke price inflation because they are less price-sensitive, prone to herd behaviour and have considerable buying power. Foreign buyers exacerbate this situation because of their dependence on intermediaries and “experts” who aggressively market UK housing as an investment opportunity.

    •London’s emergence as the second-home capital of the world, does not just affect the prices of high-end properties, but pulls up prices throughout the whole market, as buyers at every level are downgraded to the level below. This effect is nothing new in London, which has been a market for second homes for over a century, but the scale of the phenomenon is new, with up to 85% of prime property being sold to foreign buyers

    •The building of more houses under conditions of excess demand will have no effect on price. Current house prices are a demand phenomenon. The substantial growth of housing stock since 1998 has failed to check price growth. This fact is used erroneously by the property lobby as an argument for an even greater building programme. A more logical response would be to look elsewhere for the causes of house price inflation.

    •Simple defences to protect the housing market exist, and many countries such as Australia, Jersey, Denmark, Singapore, Hong Kong, China and Switzerland already use them.

    •Australia has recently introduced controls on the foreign purchase of property and several countries are currently considering controls such as South Africa and Canada.

    •The future of UK housing is very grim unless investment money is restricted, because there is an infinite supply of global funds. It is estimated that there are 63 million potential buyers in China alone.

    The report proposes a number of policies which would restore sanity to the UK housing market and ensure it remains open to British citizens of moderate means (Each of these proposals is currently in use in at least one territory worldwide).


    •Data collection on the nationality of all UK property

    •A ban on the foreign purchase of existing homes; only new properties can be purchased by foreigners.

    •Prohibit foreigners from selling a property for 5 years after purchase

    •Reciprocity principle. Foreign nationals are only allowed to buy in the UK if their home country permits UK citizens to buy property there.

    •A restriction of one foreign property per foreign family

    •Banning ownership of property by foreign companies

    •Prohibition on property purchase by foreigners with criminal records

    •Limit the % of homes in any area that can be foreign owned to prevent the development of ghettos (e.g. 20%)

    •Limit the % of flats in any block that can be owned by foreigners (e.g. 49%)

    •Size limits; foreigners prohibited (or require special permission) to buy properties over a certain size (e.g. 100sqm)



    Commenting on the report, Ben Harris- Quinney, Chairman of the Bow Group, said:

    “The UK housing crisis is at a point where radical solutions are required to prevent a situation where property ownership in the UK becomes ever more an aspiration of the few, not the many.

    Whilst a strong free market foundation is essential, foreign and corporate influence on the UK market has hurt UK citizens, and will continue to do so without intervention.

    We believe it is time to put British citizens first again in the UK housing market, and therefore certain restrictions on foreign property purchases should be considered as part of a wider holistic solution to the growing crisis.”

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