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UK Housing Market Problems Mount
- By Kevin Morley
- Published 27th May, 2008
- United Kingdom
- Unrated
RICS has forecast
that the number of house sales could fall by 40% this year. This would amount
to the largest fall in the housing market since records began and could cut
consumer spending by 8%. The previous largest fall was in 1989, when they fell
26%. Sales to date in 2008 are already down by 32%.
The slowdown has already affected removals firms who
have seen a slump in business, with the number of moves down by 55% in the
first three months of this year, and down by 68% in the past six weeks. If sales
do fall 40% this year, that represents 700,000 fewer residential and commercial
property sales than in 2007.
RICS also predicted that house prices would fall by 5%.
As many people are
already experiencing, household bills are rising sharply. This was confirmed
yesterday, by Mervyn King, the Governor of the Bank of England who warned
families to brace themselves for a further squeeze on their household finances,
as energy bills and food prices continue to rise.
With inflation set to increase to 3.7% - almost double
the official target - the likelihood of further interest rates cuts in the short
to medium term look unlikely. Indeed, we could see the return of stagflation -
rising interest rates to counter inflationary pressures, while ex
Mervin King warned home owners to expect further price
falls adding that is was impossible to predict the size of these falls. He
warned that a sharp downturn in the economy could not be ruled out.
According to the
latest RICS survey published today, a record number of surveyors are reporting
house price falls. 82% of estate agents/surveyors have seen a fall in house
prices since the start of 2008, the worst rating since records began in 1978.
The figures show that the housing slump is even more
widespread than during the last house price crash in the early 90's with house
prices falling across the whole country. According to Simon Rubinson, chief
economist at RICs, "even during the house price crash of the early 90's,
some parts of the country didn't take as much o a beating."
On a brighter note, the house price falls that are
reported are relatively modest, with ost surveyors reporting a fall of less
than 2%.
The 82% of surveyors reporting a fall is up on the
April figure of 66%. It was the 9th month in a row that the number of surveyors
reporting price falls has risen.
The worst hit areas of the country are