I recently
read a report by the Yorkshire Building Society that 54% of the country has
seen wages (salaries) rise faster than property prices in the last 10 years.
The report said that in the Midlands and North, salaries had outperformed property prices since 2007, whilst in other
parts of the UK, especially in the
South, the opposite has happened and property prices have outperformed salaries
quite noticeably.
As regular readers of my blog know, I
always like to find out what has actually happened locally in Aylesbury. To
talk of North and South is not specific enough for me. Therefore, to start, I
looked at what has happened to salaries locally since 2007. Looking at the
Office of National Statistics (ONS) data for Aylesbury Vale District Council, some
interesting figures came out...
Salaries in
Aylesbury Vale have risen by 12.15% since 2007 (although it’s been a bit of a
rollercoaster ride to get there!) - interesting when you compare that with what
has happened to salaries regionally (an increase of 15.87%) and nationally, an
increase of 17.61%.
Next, I
needed to find what had happened to property prices locally over the same time
frame of 2007 and today. Net property values in Aylesbury Vale are 38.27%
higher than they were in late 2007 (not forgetting they did dip in 2008 and
2009). Therefore...
Property values in
the Aylesbury area have increased at a higher rate than wages to the tune of 26.12%
... meaning, Aylesbury is in line with
the regional trend
All this is
important, as the relationship between salaries and property values is the
basis on how affordable property is to first (and second, third etc.) time
buyers. It is also vitally relevant for Aylesbury landlords as they need to be aware
of this when making their buy-to-let plans for the future. If more Aylesbury people
are buying, then demand for Aylesbury rental properties will drop (and vice
versa).
As I have
discussed in a few articles in my blog recently, this issue of ‘property-affordability’
is a great bellwether to the future direction of the Aylesbury property market.
Now of course, it isn’t as simple as comparing salaries and property prices, as
that measurement disregards issues such as low mortgage rates and the diminishing
proportion of disposable income that is spent on mortgage repayments.
On the face
of it, the change between 2007 and 2017 in terms of the
‘property-affordability’ hasn’t been that great. However, look back another 10
years to 1997, and that tells a completely different story. Nationally, the
affordability of property more than halved between 1997 and today. In 1997,
house prices were on average 3.5 times workers’ annual wages, whereas in 2016
workers could typically expect to spend around 7.7 times annual wages on
purchasing a home.
The issue
of a lack of homeownership has its roots in the 1980’s and 1990’s. It’s quite
hard as a tenant to pay your rent and save money for a deposit at the same
time, meaning for many Aylesbury people, home ownership isn't a realistic goal.
Earlier in the year, the Tories released proposals to combat the country’s
'broken' housing market, setting out plans to make renting more affordable,
while increasing the security of rental deals and threatening to bring tougher
legal action to cases involving bad landlords.
This is all
great news for Aylesbury tenants and decent law-abiding Aylesbury landlords
(and indirectly owner occupier homeowners).
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