x
By using this website, you agree to our use of cookies to enhance your experience.

TODAY'S OTHER NEWS

House prices to fall if Britain leaves the EU, says Osborne

George Osborne has claimed that average house prices could fall by up to 18% if the UK leaves the EU following next month's referendum.

The Chancellor made the claim at the G7 Summit of Finance Ministers and confirmed that the Treasury will this week release a report analysing the short-term economic impact of leaving the EU.

As well as the prediction that average house values could fall by between 10% and 18% in the event of a Brexit, the report will also include analysis which suggests that mortgages would get more expensive, the BBC has revealed.

Advertisement

"One consequence of leaving the European Union is that there would be a hit to the value of people's homes of at least 10% and up to 18%," said Osborne on Friday.

"At the same time mortgages will get more expensive, and mortgage rates will go up," he added.

 

When quizzed about the suggestion that a drop in average house prices could be seen as a positive, notably for first-time buyers, Osborne was unwavering in his response.

"You don't get affordable homes by wrecking the economy," he told the BBC.

In response to Osborne's claims, former Work and Pensions Secretary, Ian Duncan Smith compared the Chancellor to 'Pinocchio'.

Representing the Leave campaign, over the weekend, Duncan Smith told Sky News: “Let me just remind everybody that it was the Treasury and George Osborne who said when we came into power in 2010 we couldn’t trust Treasury reports because they were always fiddled with by chancellors of the exchequer.”

Last week the final House Price Index from the Office for National Statistics reported that house prices increased by 9% in the year to March, up from 7.6% in the year to February.

Meanwhile, last week the National Association of Estate Agents and the Association of Residential Letting Agents said that leaving the EU could have 'damaging consequences', while London Central Portfolio recently suggested a Brexit would be positive for overseas property investment in the UK.

*Graham Norwood is away on annual leave until June 4th. Conor Shilling will be undertaking editorial duties in his absence. Please send any press enquiries to press@estateagenttoday.co.uk

  • Terence Dicks

    Normal load of old rubbish for a Monday morning.

    Fake Agent

    Do you agree? Disagree? Don't leave us hanging, Terence.

     
  • Algarve  Investor

    Osborne and Cameron need to stop with all the scare stories and end of the world rhetoric. There are plenty of reasons why staying in the EU is a good thing, without having to resort to this base level fearmongering. People will say straight through it.

    Make the positive case for the EU, as the SNP, Labour, the Greens and the Lib Dems have been, rather than dragging politics into the gutter with all this "he said, she said" nonsense.

    (In the interests of balance, the Leave side have been just as guilty - if not more so - of scaremongering.)

  • Brit Sixteen Sixty Four

    Prices will continue falling if we leave or stay in. Is he suddenly going scrap his stamp duty and buy to let tax changes? Is he going to reverse the Chinese capital restraints, the Russian sanctions. Is he going to stop the South East Asian slow down or naming the owners of tax haven company properties in the UK?

    No, the housing bubble is going to continue to collapse. Domestic wage growth isn't high enough to maintain these prices.

  • Brit Sixteen Sixty Four

    Prices will continue falling if we leave or stay in. Is he suddenly going scrap his stamp duty and buy to let tax changes? Is he going to reverse the Chinese capital restraints, the Russian sanctions. Is he going to stop the South East Asian slow down or naming the owners of tax haven company properties in the UK?

    No, the housing bubble is going to continue to collapse. Domestic wage growth isn't high enough to maintain these prices.

  • icon

    The effect of an already dropped Sterling value seems to have been missed. There are strong signals that England will be downgraded, and on a minus of £1.6 Trillion it will mean near bankruptcy. 2000 American companies based in London will move to European head-offices in Paris, Madrid, Berlin aso

icon

Please login to comment

MovePal MovePal MovePal
sign up