Johnny Mars Bar
Well-Known Member
here's his latest lamenting the Tories 31 minutes in
I had a listen to it when making dinner this evening.
It's criminal that Rory lost a leadership election to Johnson. He would've made a great PM.
here's his latest lamenting the Tories 31 minutes in
Only if the prices don’t rise to reflect what the stamp duty would have added. When Sunak froze it, post Covid, it saw a 20% increase in house prices, in 2 years.Not really true though, is it?
Are people buying a house for four, five hundred grand genuinely wealthy?
I would expect these types of buyers to be the most constrained in terms of raising their cash deposits, so the removal of stamp duty could actually have an unusually large benefit for them.
That’s always the risk when a purchase tax is removed, prices may simply adjust so that the transaction cost is unchanged, but I think it’s difficult to draw solid conclusions from the post-COVID freeze.Only if the prices don’t rise to reflect what the stamp duty would have added. When Sunak froze it, post Covid, it saw a 20% increase in house prices, in 2 years.
Of course, it could be one of those ‘mental taxes’, where people are more inclined to move house if the price they see is the most they’ll pay?
Indeed. It’s a tax that, if it’s going to be abolished, should be done without any announcement. Given the vanity of politicians, sadly, that’s hugely unlikely.That’s always the risk when a purchase tax is removed, prices may simply adjust so that the transaction cost is unchanged, but I think it’s difficult to draw solid conclusions from the post-COVID freeze.
The reduction in stamp duty was for a finite period only and there was obviously an incentive to complete transactions quickly, and bank rate was at a record low as well giving another incentive to move fast.
Also, for mortgaged properties, house prices would need to increase by a magnitude of the stamp duty saving for purchasers not to see improved affordability. So I would agree with your suggestion of a mental aspect to the tax, given that even a higher purchase price would still be more affordable for most.
Of course, if the abolition were to become a serious prospect ahead of the next election then you would have to think that housing activity would be severely reduced for a period, with prices likely falling in order to secure a sale, so it might not prove especially popular after all.
You pay stamp duty on any property over 125k don’t you?
Correct me if I’ve missed something - only skim read the piece on the BBC - but buying a £125k house doesn’t make you “wealthy”. It’s first time buyer territory.
Hard to find a property cheaper than that that isn’t full of asbestos and bullet holes these days.
Didn’t lenders start to offer staggering 40 yr mortgages to helpMy son bought a newbuild in York a couple of months ago - ex-renter - cost - £230k for an end of terrace 2 bedroom. I read earlier that the proposed changes to stamp duty is just 1.6% of the cost of the average UK house sale. Less than £5k.
I bought the house where I live nearly 30 years ago - at that time it was about 2.5 times my annual salary. Houses on my street are now going for nearly 7 times the salary I was on when I retired 4 years ago. All the stamp duty change does is reward those already owning property particularly at the higher end. The biggest barrier to buying and selling is the disparity between incomes and prices - which is only getting wider. The answer is reduce prices or massively increase wages both of which are electoral and economic suicide
Didn’t lenders start to offer staggering 40 yr mortgages to help
I agree and may be wrong but I believe many were taken.being in debt for longer is not help. Having a "standard" 25 year mortgage means I own my home outright - thats a proper help if you want to live and maybe retire
I agree and may be wrong but I believe many were taken.
Literally anyone plucked out of any 'Spoons at last orders would have made a better PM than Johnson TBF.I had a listen to it when making dinner this evening.
It's criminal that Rory lost a leadership election to Johnson. He would've made a great PM.
Not the right look, I’m afraid.I had a listen to it when making dinner this evening.
It's criminal that Rory lost a leadership election to Johnson. He would've made a great PM.
Literally anyone plucked out of any 'Spoons at last orders would have made a better PM than Johnson TBF.
Are you suggesting Johnson got the gig because he looked like he'd been dragged through a hedge backwards and could conjure up unintelligible drivel at a moment's notice.Literally anyone plucked out of any 'Spoons at last orders would have made a better PM than Johnson TBF.
Tbh I think we'd all rather a nice Bordeaux over a pint of lukewarm piss water that is John Smiths ;)No way he's there at last orders. Just pops in for his 'man of the people' photo op and then off to down a quality Bordeaux with some of his donors.