The problem is, and always has been, money. Young adults don't know how to handle it or use it responsibly. Many 18-25 year olds end up in debt, normally several thousands.
As a 28 year old teacher I earnt around £30k a year and I tried to purchase a property for £210,000. The highest mortgage I could find was for £155,000 so I needed a deposit of £55,000.
Very few individuals aged 28 have more than a few thousand of savings so getting the first house is near impossible.
My mortgage repayments are £681 a month compared to the £1,200 a month my friend pays for his rented home of similar size less than a mile away.
The rental market is crippling and even though this friend earns more than £40,000 pa he will never manage to save up a deposit in fact he is still working on paying off his debts. Until renting becomes significantly cheaper then the hard working members of society will remain poor
I have bored my wife silly by banging on over the years that the obsession with rising house prices in this country will end in tears.
I am of the age when buying a modest first house was a pretty attainable aspiration for many people, even those of fairly modest means. It has now become almost impossible for many young people.
It appears to me, that a lot of the political ya-booing on NSC, may be more of a generational thing rather than strictly political( except amongst our extremist brethren!). A lot of younger people feel hard done by and blame the Government of the day. If only it was that simple.
It is one hell of a task to reverse the position we are in regarding housing. An unenviable task for whoever is in power, but one that could go along way to making for a more harmonious society.