So, I got talking over a glass of lemonade with my
2nd cousins and a couple of their children, about the times of 15%
interest rates and how the more mature members of our family had to endure the
3 day week, 20% inflation and the threat of nuclear annihilation in 4 minutes
.. so, foolishly, I said what with all the opportunities youngsters had today,
they had never had it so good!
Trust one of my
cousin’s children to have gained some financial/economics qualifications before
going to Law School, as they debated with me the genuine economic predicament
of Millennials and how a combination of student debt, unemployment, global
proliferation, EU migration and rising house values is reducing the salaries
and outlook of masses of the UK’s younger generation, causing an unparalleled disparity
of wealth between the generations. So of course I asked why that was?
They said Millennials
were paying the price for the UK’s most spectacular bookkeeping catastrophe to
date (bigger than the Bank bailout after the Credit Crunch). Back in the 1950’s
and 1960’s, nobody predicted us Brit’s would live as long as we do today, and
in such abundant numbers. The OAP pensions that were promised in the past (be
that Government State Pension or Company Final Salary Schemes) which appeared
to be nothing fancy at the time, are now burdensomely over-lavish, and that is
hurting the Millennials of today and will do so for years to come.
Bringing
it back to property, the young 2nd cousin once removed ‘soon to be’
lawyer, stated that baby boomers born between 1945 and 1965 have been big recipients
of the vast rising house prices over the 1970’s/80’s/90’s and 2000’s. Add to
that their decent pensions, meaning cumulatively, their wealth has grown
exponentially through no skill of their own.
This
disparity of wealth between the older and younger generations could have unparalleled
consequences for the living standards of younger Millennials…. So Houston
Stoke on Trent – do we have a problem??
Well
Stoke on Trent Property Blog readers, you know I like a challenge. I can’t
disagree with some of what the younger family member said, but there are always
two sides to every story, so I thought I would do some homework on the matter
..
Since
1990, the average value of a property in Stoke on Trent has risen from £49,000
to its current level of £143,100. As there are a total of 66,748 homeowners
aged over 50 in Stoke on Trent; that means there has been a £6.28bn windfall
for those Stoke on Trent homeowners fortunate enough to own their own homes
during the property boom of the 1990s and early 2000’s.
I must admit that the growth in property values in the 1990’s and 2000’s certainly helped many of Stoke on Trent’s baby boomers. The figures do appear to put into reverse gear the perceived wisdom that each generation gets wealthier than the previous one … and so with all this wealth, the figures do back up the youngsters argument that Millennials are being priced out of home ownership.
Or
do they? Are they?
Next
week, I will carry on this discussion where I will give the Baby Boomer’s
defence to the prosecution’s case!
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