You gave it to Bakero didn't you. I didn't see this post until just now I'd have seen it last night, but I was playing computer games.
Genius
You gave it to Bakero didn't you. I didn't see this post until just now I'd have seen it last night, but I was playing computer games.
TBF you were lucky to get a council house. No chance at all for the 'kids' (my girls are 23 and 25) of today who pay a vast proportion of their monthly net income to rent very small, and frankly shit private flats
Back in those days when I bought my first house (a 3 bed semi) I had to pay a deposit equal to about 5 months of my net pay. Today if I assume what that salary would be (fairly easy as the type of work still exists) it would be roughly 20 months of net pay .... so yes, in my view we had it a whole load easier, plus we have benefited from meteoric equity growth
I get your point about one holiday in 11 years but I'd argue if you had that relative income today it would take you a whole lot longer to get there even if you were one of the very few fortunate enough to get a council house .. without that you might never have done it
It was because my ex had just finished his time in the Navy. We applied for a council house in Yorkshire where he was born, and because forces are classed as homeless, and we had a baby, we waited just a few weeks.
We stayed there for 6 years before buying our own house.
Edit to add - any equity will go to social care.
My Mother is paying £900 a week for her care home, and Mother in law is paying £650 a week for hers.
Not even joking.Genius
Then I would consider you lucky, not a hope in hell my girls would be able to save unless they came home, but Seaford is well out of reach of their jobs so they are forced to pay (almost) criminally high rent
I very much get the point about care costs as I have to pay for my M-I-L ...... but when I fast forward to consider what my children will encounter I really do shudder at the thought. So whatever we are experiencing now it's impossible to believe it's not going to get a whole lot worse
Not everyone goes into a care home. They're trying to make it easier for people to stay at home longer.Edit to add - any equity will go to social care.
My Mother is paying £900 a week for her care home, and Mother in law is paying £650 a week for hers.
This is off topic, but 3.5% is good. Who are you using, and what type of account?We set up a saver account for our daughter (3.5% interest I believe)
Not everyone goes into a care home. They're trying to make it easier for people to stay at home longer.
This is off topic, but 3.5% is good. Who are you using, and what type of account?
And similar arguments about housing being out of the hands of ordinary people were being made then (late 70’s early 80’s).Yes getting on the property ladder in the 80s was a lot easier but the financial market was a mess ,just one example PPI now,people also forget that interest rates in the 80s were at one point 18.5% ,imagine paying that now.
Not just young people that struggle with a deposit.If you're willing to help them out with a deposit, then as long as they're not on a rock bottom minimum wage then they should be able to do it, even in Brighton.
It's the deposit that a vast majority of young people struggle with.
I did it post-recession with a large-ish deposit. It helps having a very good credit rating - make sure they work on that.
My parents told us (4 siblings) as youngsters, that if we were each minded to go to Uni, that they would find the money to help us do that, and would see that as setting us on our way in life. Each of us were suitably grateful, and understood that this was in effect a (very) early 'advance' on any inheritance!
I have told our lads the same, and our eldest graduated this summer, (with a 1st ), debt-free thanks to the backing of parents and grand-parents - a position he knows he is very fortunate to be in. His brother will get the same help when he needs it (it doesn't have to be Uni, obviously - learning a trade, or setting up a small business would be equally valid).
This choice almost certainly means we wouldn't have any money available to help with the housing dilemma as well, but you can only do so much.
Yeah and then the kids can buy cheap houses with the jobs they've not got any longer.Crash the economy, the only and best way to do it.
Anyone remember when Norman Lamont sang in the bath as interest rates hit 15%
The issue now is if they went back to these levels there would be widespread mortgage defaults