The degree to which young Huddersfield people are locked out
of the Huddersfield housing market has been revealed in new statistics.
A Huddersfield
landlord was asking me the other week to what effect homeownership rates in Huddersfield
in the early to middle aged adult age range had affected the demand for rental
property in Huddersfield since the Millennium. I knew anecdotally that it
affected the Huddersfield rental market, but I wanted some cold hard numbers to
back it up. As you know, I like a challenge when it comes to the stats.. so
this is what I found out for the landlord, and I’d like to share them with you
as well.
As anyone in Huddersfield,
and most would say those born more recently, are drastically less likely to own
their own home at a given age than those born a decade earlier, let’s roll the
clock back to the Millennium and compare the figures from then to today.
In the year 2000, 51.4%
of Huddersfield 28-year olds (born in 1972) owned their own home, whilst a 28
year old today born in 1990) would have a 27.4% chance of owning their own
home. Next, let’s look at someone born ten years before that. So, going back to
the Millennium, a 38 year Huddersfield person (therefore born in 1962) would
have a 75.8% chance of owning his or her own home and a 38 year today in Huddersfield
(born in 1980) would only have a 59.0% chance of owning their own home.
Since the Millennium, overall general homeownership in the 25 to
44 year old age range in Huddersfield has reduced from 70.13% to 50.71%
If you look at the
graph below, split into the four age ranges of 25 year olds (yo) to 29yo, 30yo
to 34yo, 35yo to 39yo and finally 40yo to 44 yo, you will quite clearly see the
changes since the Millennium in Huddersfield. The fact is the figures in Huddersfield
show the homeownership rate has proportionally fallen the most for the youngest
(25yo to 29yo) age range compared to the other age ranges.
The landlord
suggested this deterioration in homeownership in Huddersfield across the age
groups could be down to the fact that more of those born in the 1980’s and
1990’s (over those born in the 60’s and 70’) are going to University and hence
entering the job market at an older age or those young adults are living with
their parents longer.
I read some national
homeownership statistics of different age groups with the same number of years
after they left education (rather than at the same age) and that gave an
identical dip to the graph above. Neither
are these drops in homeownership related with a significant increase in the
number of young adults living with their parents. Again, nationally, that has
hardly changed over the last 20 years as the percentage of 30-year-olds living
with Mum and Dad only increased from 22% of those born in the early ‘70s to 23%
of those born in the early ‘80s.
So, what does this
mean for the rental market in Huddersfield?
Only one thing ..
with the local authority not building Council houses, Housing Associations
strapped for cash to build new properties and the younger generation not
buying, there is only one way these youngsters can obtain a roof over their
head and have a home of their own .. through the private landlord sector. Now
with the new tax rules and up and coming licensing rules, Huddersfield
landlords will have to work smarter to ensure they make the investment returns
they have in the past. If you ever want to pick my brains on the future
direction of the Huddersfield rental market .. drop me line or pop in next time
you are passing my office.
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