Before we look at Aylesbury though, let us look at some
interesting figures for the country as a whole. Between 2001 and 2011, 971,144 EU
citizens came to the UK to live and of those, 171,164 of them (17.68%) have
bought their own home. It might surprise people that only 5.07% of EU migrants
managed to secure a council house. However, 676,091 (69.62%) of them went into
the private rental sector. This increase
in population from the EU has, no doubt, added great stress to the UK housing
market.
Looking at the figures, the housing market as a whole is undoubtedly
affected by migration but it has been the private rented housing sector,
especially in those areas where migrants come together, that is affected the
most. Indeed, I have seen that many EU
migrants often compete for such housing not with UK tenants but with other EU migrants.
In 2001, 3.68 million rented a property from a landlord in the UK. Ten years later in 2011, whilst EU migration
added an additional 676,091 people renting a property from a landlord, there
were actually an additional 4.14 million people who became tenants and were not
EU migrants, but predominately British!
As a landlord, it is really important to gauge the potential
demand for your rental property, especially if you are a landlord who buys
property in areas popular with Eastern European EU migrants. To gauge the level of EU migration (and thus
demand), one of the best ways to calculate the growth of migrants is to
calculate the number of people who ask for a National Insurance number (which
EU members are able to obtain).
In Aylesbury Vale, migration has risen over the last few
years. For example, in 2007 there were 1,237 migrant national Insurance cards
(NIC) issued and the year after in 2008, 1,094 NIC cards were issued. However,
in 2014, this increased slightly to 1,423 NIC’s. However, if the pattern of
other migrations since WW2 continues, over time there will be an increasing
demand for owner occupied property, which may affect the market in certain
areas of high migrant concentration. On the other hand, over time some
households move into the larger housing market, reducing concentrations and
pressures.
In essence, migration has affected the Aylesbury property
market; it couldn’t fail to because of the additional 9,353 working age
migrants that have moved into the Aylesbury area since 2005. However, it has
not been the main influence on the market. Property values in Aylesbury today
are 34.49% higher than they were in 2005. According to the Office of National
Statistics, rents for tenants in the South East have only grown on average by 0.95%
a year since 2005 .... I would say if it wasn’t for the migrants, we would be in
a far worse position when it came to the Aylesbury property market. This was backed
up by the then Home Secretary Theresa May back in 2012 - more than a third of
all new housing demand in Britain is caused by inward migration and there is
evidence that without the demand caused by such immigration, house prices would
be 10% lower over a 20 year period.
If you want to know more about the Aylesbury property
market, then for more articles like this, please visit the Aylesbury Property
Blog http://theaylesburypropertyblog.blogspot.co.uk/
or pop in to my Temple Street office when you are passing.
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