Machiavelli
Well-known member
Top post, but a couple of points:As with life it is how much slack people factor into their cost of living. Being warned is one thing, but have a pandemic, cost of living crisis, fuel crisis, coupled with interest rates not slowly working their way back to a norm, but pretty much jumping 4% within a quarter isn't a financial shock many can deal with or necessarily prepare for - historically there hasn't been many jumps of this magnitude in such a short space of time.
This base rate rise which is now 4% over 5 months is a significant shock. This is comparable to the 1988 base rate leap when it went from 8% in June 1988 to 13% by Nov 1988, a 5% base rate rise in 5 months. Hopefully the comparison ends there, because it rose another 2% by Oct 1989.
From that high point of 15% in Oct 1989, interest rates pretty much fell, or at least didn't rise significantly for the next 33 years until this point. People are now up against history in facing the end of a mortgage deal and looking at a 3-4% increase, especially coupled with cost of living etc.
-- first, add in that real-term wages have fallen way behind house price inflation
-- I'm not convinced with your comparison with 88: the 5% jump may be a larger amount, but it was only a c60% jump. The rises over the past c15 months have gone from 0.1 to 4.25%. I'm aware that mortgage rates will be higher than the BoE rate, but that's still a massive jump of over 100% for those not on fixed rate mortgages.