UK Government Puts In Place CMHC-Like Provisions – “95% mortgages available so that the dream of home ownership is achievable for everyone”

“It’s about people’s hopes and dreams, when you get the keys to your first flat, it’s a magic moment.”… The Government would make 95 per cent mortgages available so that the “dream of home ownership is achievable for everyone”.
- David Cameron, Prime Minister of the UK, announcing changes that would see the UK taxpayers backstopping 5% down mortgages for home buyers and giving money to property developers (Telegraph, 21 Nov 2011).

14 Responses to UK Government Puts In Place CMHC-Like Provisions – “95% mortgages available so that the dream of home ownership is achievable for everyone”

  1. step up from your council flat…

  2. Cameron resorting to the arcane arts when austerity failed to get the job done. Sacrificing a Yorkshire in front of Dame Maggie, one last big push presaged by a salvo of market-driven solutions. o ye poor unfortunate souls.

  3. Swapping short term gains for long term pain.
    You’d think there would be criticism of this move, given the debt climate.

  4. This excellent comment below ‘Cameron to launch housing market initiative’ article at FT.com 21 Nov 2011:

    “The biggest imbalance in our economy is the ridiculous height of house prices and the biggest economic delusion that owning your house is the route to riches. Prices will come down sharply when the decline in jobs and wages combines with higher real mortgage interest rates, as must happen with the shortage of credit. Subsidising first time buyers will only delay this necessary outcome and rather cruelly expose them to losses. In the short term it may be popular with new buyers and existing owners, but it is of course a leveraged way to buy votes with taxpayers’ money.”
    - eurobuck, November 21 7:40pm

    Also, other sensible comments.

  5. In my opinion, home ownership is a symptom of success, not a cause of it. If governments really want to encourage the success of their respective nations, governments should be guaranteeing low interest / high risk loans on R&D activities, NOT on houses. Investment in innovation so that countries can sell things of value in the future is the only thing that makes sense to lever up on when interest rates are low. Voters clearly don’t get this or these politicians would be thrown out on their asses. You can’t push on a string.

    • Agreed.
      In this case, the UK government is acting like the last fool in, jumping on what they see as the only working engine. Incredible that groups of apparently intelligent individuals can come up with plans that are so foolish.
      The inverse of Brown selling UK gold in ’99 (at the bottom of the market).

    • well then there are the solyndras. you’re assuming govt can know which activities deserve funding, when to give up on a bad idea, when to give it a shot in the arm, how to adapt to change. it’s too easy spending other people’s money. govt shouldn’t be guaranteeing anything except basic freedoms and private ppty rights. the rest takes care of itself.

      • Agreed – governments are generally bad at any type of allocation of capital. I probably should have tried to make my point a bit softer: not only are they doing something they shouldn’t, they are doing it in the worst possible way.

  6. More from the same FT.com comment section:

    “One has to be a fool or mad to mortgage his own future to buy a pigeon hole for 3 times the real value, often using granny’s savings.
    The housing market in the UK is in the hands of speculators, and the powers that be are in it up to their neck.”

    - Gulliver, November 21 1:58am

  7. “The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” (Benjamin Franklin)

  8. Oh but they are expecting the *same* result

  9. Actually, they both said it, with similar results.

    You learn something everyday. thanks

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