Renters snub buy-in plan
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Your support makes all the difference.GOVERNMENT attempts to "staircase" tenants into homeownership by turning rents into mortgages have been slammed by lenders and housing experts as unsustainable and unrealistic. It was announced last week that only five tenants took up one scheme that the Government spent £410,000 to promote.
Another 100 applications to the Rent to Mortgage scheme are being processed, but this is peanuts compared withGovernment expectations. At its launch two years ago,Sir George Young then housing minister, spoke of 1.4 million council tenants and "many thousands" of housing association tenants who might be able to afford their own homes.
Rent to Mortgage allows council and housing association tenants to treat rents as a staircase into home ownership, with equity being transferred in stages. Three of the five successful applications were from tenants of the Barbican, owned by the Corporation of London, where the high value of the flats makes the scheme attractive when tenants cannot afford to buy outright.
A 1991 report by the Council of Mortgage Lenders predicted that Rent to Mortgage would be a failure. Author Steve Wilcox, of Cardiff University, says that developments since have killed off any slim chance of success.
"The current relationship between rents, capital values and interest rates means there is virtually no demand for the scheme, except for very new tenants in some regions," he argues. "The Rent to Mortgage scheme is a niche product aimed at tenants who can afford to pay their rent without assistance from housing benefit, but who cannot afford outright purchase. The changes in the private housing market over the last two years, with house prices and interest rates falling while council rents continued to rise at 5 plus per cent above inflation, have in effect wiped out the market for the scheme."
A more flexible alternative is the Shared Ownership scheme, available through housing associations. Purchasers buy a share of a property, from one quarter to three quarters, and pay rent to the association on the balance. This has been much more successful, with 70,000 households converting into homeowners.
It has been a succcess because it enables people to move out of properties with which they are dissatisfied. Tenants of other landlords, including local authorities, and those on waiting lists, can apply to associations for especially built properties or eligible properties purchased on the open market. People moving for jobs to higher cost areas are also eligible.
The Halifax figures Shared Ownership is not always the cheapest option. Douglas Smallwood, its head of commercial lending, says: "It varies according to which part of the country you are in. In the North, it is cheaper to buy outright; in the South-east, it is cheaper to go for Shared Ownership - it still makes good economic sense there."
Government pressure on associations to adopt a more commercial attitude is likely to lead to significant rent increases in April, particularly for larger properties. Tenants not on housing benefit are likely to find that rent is now not much cheaper than a mortgage.
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£500 5.75 Year
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5 Year £500 7.50% fixed Month
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Lloyds Bank Local branch Mastercard £20,000 0.94 11.80 £40
Midland Bank Local branch Mastercard £20,000 1.30 18.10 £35
MBNA International 0800 062620 Mastercard/Visa £20,000 1.38 18.90 -
STORE CARDS
Payment by direct debit Other methods
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John Lewis Local store - - 1.39 18.00
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Burtons Local store 1.94 25.90 2.20 30.40
APR=Annualised percentage rate. EAR=effective annual rate. All rates are subject to change without notice.
Source: London & Country. Freephone 0800 373300 Compiled on 16 February 1995
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