According to Sheffield
University, buy to let landlords will continue fuelling the growth of the
private rented sector in the coming decades. By their estimates (and they are
considered a centre of excellence on the topic), the rate of homeownership nationally
will fall to 50% (today it is 67% in Aylesbury) by 2032, while the rate of
private sector renting will increase to 35% (interestingly, in Aylesbury it
stands at 16.3% today).
Therefore, the demand
for rental accommodation in Aylesbury will grow by 964 households in the next
five years ... and these are the reasons why, irrespective of the distractions
set out in the newspapers.
Aylesbury property
values over the last six years have risen a lot more than average
wages/salaries, meaning as homeownership and mortgage availability is dependent
on your ability to pay has served to push home ownership further out of reach
for many, at a time when the stock of council houses has actually withered. (Nationally, the number of council houses in
the last ten years has dropped from 3.16m to 2.18m households - a drop of 31.1%).
Now it’s true the
Tory’s efforts to fix the deficiency of affordable housing have focused on
those who want to buy a home, ranging from Help to Buy and their much vaunted
Help to Buy Isa, and Starter Homes Scheme, an initiative offering a 20%
discount for first time buyers … but if you are unable to save for the deposit
... none of this means anything to the ‘20
something’s’ of Aylesbury ... and they still need a roof over their heads!
Currently, 11,162 people live in private rented
accommodation in Aylesbury.
These are big numbers
and a sizeable chunk of the electorate. So whilst it appears Aylesbury
“Generation Rent” youngsters will continue to rent and to not to buy for the
reasons set out above, Aylesbury buy-to-let landlords will be lifted by the
projections of greater rental demand. Aylesbury and the area around it still
offers the prospect of strong economic growth forecasts and has a reputation as
a lively and desirable place to live. You see, with the new rules on tax, more
and more landlords will be looking to move away from the previous honeypot of
central London, because its higher prices meant lower rental yields. With the
new tax rules and central London’s cooling of house price inflation, more and
more landlords will look further afield, including Aylesbury (interestingly, I have already been chatting
to a few central London landlords after they read the Aylesbury Property Blog).
So, by 2021, the number of rental properties in Aylesbury will rise to 6,628
The proposed path of the HS2, all these trees will go. |
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