Rat and Mouse
Thu
22
May
Why shared equity's been shown to fail

On Brown's £200 million injection into shared equity:

These are pathetic gestures which will do little to shift the housing market one way or the other. With the average home costing a little under £200,000, £200 million will buy only 1,000 properties — compared with the 167,000 built last year, many of which remain unsold. As with Gordon Brown’s sale of gold reserves at the bottom of the market in 1999, all he will achieve is to make a spectacularly badly timed punt with a bundle of taxpayers’ money.

The government’s previous attempts to encourage social-housing tenants into shared-equity schemes have not proved a huge success. In 2005, it introduced the ‘Social Homebuy’ scheme designed to entice tenants to buy a stake in their homes. By last November only 88 had chosen to do so. There are good reasons why the take-up is low.

In a very interesting piece for the Spectator, Ross Clark argues that half a home isn't worth half a home.

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