Renting used to be a dirty word in the 60’s and 70’s. You
either lived in a ‘Rigsby Rising Damp’ style bedsit with wood chip on the wall
and a coin operated electric meter (that buzzed in the night) or you lived in a
council house. In the latter part of the 20th Century, the British were
persuaded that rent payments were ‘wasted money’. However, owning often makes
less financial sense than renting and as the rate of homeownership is starting
to drop substantially, as we roll the clock forward to today, there is no
stigma at all to renting .. everyone is doing it. In fact, of the 63,070
residents of Maidenhead, 17,190 of you rent your house from either the local
authority/social provider (ie council house or housing association) or private
landlords – meaning 27.25% of Maidenhead people are tenants.
The idea of homeownership is deeply embedded in the British
soul, in fact 44,856 Maidenhead people live in an owner occupied property (or 71.12%).
Housing is at the heart of Government policy, as George Osborne has promised
200,000 new properties a year so first time buyers can buy their first home whilst
recently changing the tax laws for buy to let landlords. To get votes, Thatcher
(and everyone since) ran election campaigns promising everybody their own home,
and as a country, we seem to equate homeownership the goal of British life.
So as more and more people are renting nowadays, are we turning
to a more European way of living….. quite ironic given the recent news! Well, I
believe, as a country, we are. In fact, homeownership could be affecting your
health! The UK, according to Bloomberg, is only the 21st most healthy country
in the world. Germany is at No.10 and Switzerland at No.4 and homeownership is
at 52.5% and 44% respectively in those countries (in the UK it is 64.8%).
In the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead Council area,
79.15% of homeowners who own their house outright said they were in ‘very good’
or ‘good’ health whilst, at the other end of the scale, 4.69% said their health
was ‘bad’ or ‘very bad’. Looking at renting, the census splits tenants into two
types – 75.43% of Windsor and Maidenhead local authority/social tenants said
they were in ‘very good’ or ‘good’ health and 7.72% were in ‘bad’ or ‘very bad’
health …
… whilst ‘private rented tenants’ in Windsor and Maidenhead,
were the healthiest, as 91.58% of them described themselves in ‘very good’ or
‘good’ health and only 2.08% were in ‘bad’ or ‘very bad’ health
I am not suggesting that low homeownership rates in Switzerland
and Germany are directly linked to health, nor, do I expect Brits to all go to
Berlin, Interlaken or Düsseldorf and realise how happy people are when they
don't need to worry about all the stresses which accompany homeownership. The
numbers for Maidenhead do go some way to back up the argument (and they are the
same across the whole of the UK). Nonetheless I do think that substantially all
of the upside to homeownership in recent years has been a function of monumental
rising house prices. Now that's come to an end, it's hard to see why anybody
would want to buy?
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