Gritt23
New member
I always wonder how accurate these figures are, especially when the housing market is quiet, because that by definition means the "average house price" will consist of a smaller survey.
Take the extreme, if one house was sold in July, and it was a 3 bed semi, small rooms, little garden, and it went for £250k, whereas in August, the only house sold was a 5 bed detatched for £500k, would the figures tell us house prices have doubled?
I just don't see how it can be as accurate as RPI inflation which is measured on a standard "basket of goods" from one month to another.
Take the extreme, if one house was sold in July, and it was a 3 bed semi, small rooms, little garden, and it went for £250k, whereas in August, the only house sold was a 5 bed detatched for £500k, would the figures tell us house prices have doubled?
I just don't see how it can be as accurate as RPI inflation which is measured on a standard "basket of goods" from one month to another.