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Massive mortgages are turning a generation of young couples into wage slaves, it has been claimed.

A report warned that the spiralling price of housing means Britain is in danger of becoming the "grossly divided" society of have and have-nots not seen since Victorian times.

First-time buyers who manage to make it on to the property ladder and parents with young families are like "bonded labourers" tied to their jobs.

The bleak report by academics - called On The Treadmill - says "super-size" loans are pushing soaring numbers of parents to desert their children in order to work long hours.

Many are taking on second jobs to pay a mortgage which could be up to seven times' bigger than their salary.

The warning came as figures from the British Bankers' Association showed the average home loan is now a record-breaking £152,800 - compared with £50,000 in 1994.

With a £150,000 mortgage, the monthly repayments are about £1,100, or 75 per cent of the take-home pay of a worker on average earnings.

Many buyers in the South, however, have to borrow more than double this amount, with average asking prices of nearly £400,000 in the capital.

The report, from the universities of Aberdeen and Loughborough, claims many young couples are being turned into "bonded labourers" by their mortgage.

This is someone who works to repay a loan, typically trapped into doing excessively long hours for little money.

Dr John Bone, a sociology lecturer at Aberdeen, said: "They are like bonded labourers because they are so heavily indebted.

"For these young homeowners, the burden of mortgage debt will place great stress on those who have families.

"Both debt-harassed parents are forced to work increasingly long hours to meet the payments.

"Little time will be left for family life and little disposable income with which to enjoy it."

The problem is likely to get worse, with the size of the average mortgage increasing by nearly £12,500 over the past 12 months.

The preliminary findings from the universities' 18-month study of 18-to 40-year-olds says the cost of buying a home will create a "grossly divided society last seen in the 19th and early 20th century".

Those who do buy will be taking on levels of debt which would have been "inconceivable" to previous generations.

Meanwhile, those who cannot afford to buy will feel forced to delay getting married or having children because they want to own before making such an important commitment.

Without their own home, many will have to live with their parents, rent at vast expense or live in "studentstyle" house shares, even in their thirties.

A spokesman for the think-tank, the Relationships Foundation, said: "This report highlights a very difficult situation for many families.

"When taking on these huge mortgages, parents mustn't forget that a good home is more than just a large house. It involves time together as a family.

"There is a wealth of research showing that keeping time for children is essential for their well-being and helps them educationally, socially and emotionally."

One family involved in the study, which will continue for another two years, spoke of the misery involved in renting.

They have moved five times in four years, as their landlords decided to sell up or start charging an extortionate rent. House prices have been increasing for more than a decade to reach a record of nearly £200,000 for the average home.

They are still rising at an inflation-busting 10.9 per cent per year, according to the biggest mortgage lender, the Halifax.

It estimates that buying a home is impossible in 70 per cent of towns for key workers, such as teachers, police, firemen and nurses. Four interest rate rises since last summer have made the situation even worse.

Rates are now at their highest level for six years at 5.5 per cent, with economists warning they could reach six per cent this year.

David Stubbs, senior economist at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, said: "Stretched affordability among first-time buyers means many cannot contemplate buying a home at the increased rates of interest now been demanded by mortgage providers."

Recent research found rising numbers of under-30s can only afford to buy with the help of their parents.

About 40 per cent who have bought over the past three years had help from their parents, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders.

Historically, just one in four buyers had help from the so-called "Bank of Mum and Dad".

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/arti...in_page_id=1770

Man is made by his belief. As he believes, so he is.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: England
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Several people have asked me if I plan to move back to the UK with my husband, and this is one of the reasons that the answer is invariably no.

Coming from the south, house prices are dearer than those in the north. For £152,800 in the Poole area (which is where I came from), I could get a 2-bed flat in one of the less-nice areas. To get a 3-bed house in an area you might want to raise children in, you're looking at £300,000 at the bare minimum. That kind of money is hard to come by, particularly when the Bank of Mum & Dad is seeing increases in their own mortgage payments.

Make sure you're wearing clean knickers. You never know when you'll be run over by a bus.

Filed: Country: Morocco
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when i watch HGTV and see the prices in the south (and other cheaper areas of the US) it makes me sick! giant houses with acres of land and top of the line appliances for a quarter of what it costs in CA/NY.

i'm totally priced out of my own home town unless i ever come into some serious cash. or move.

"It's far better to be alone than wish you were." - Ann Landers

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Filed: Timeline
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when i watch HGTV and see the prices in the south (and other cheaper areas of the US) it makes me sick! giant houses with acres of land and top of the line appliances for a quarter of what it costs in CA/NY.

Every month I hear of someone I work with moving out of the NE. Not one of them has been over 35. The NE is hemorrhaging young people, we all know what that trend foretells for the future.

Man is made by his belief. As he believes, so he is.

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Thailand
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People think they can afford these huge mortgages because they are taking out interest only loans where they aren't even paying off the principal or they are using ARMs. These were fine until the "interest only" period was up or payments were adjusted.

We are now in a period where home prices are grossly inflated. Not only that, I believe this is the first time in generations where individuals are making less than those from the previous generation.

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Filed: Country: Vietnam
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Who says you have to own a home. Would you believe some people are happy to rent??? Now that is a thought :innocent:

What are they going to do when they retire and their landlord raises their rent beyond their social security or retirement income?

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Who says you have to own a home. Would you believe some people are happy to rent??? Now that is a thought :innocent:

Renting is OK as a temporary measure, but why pay someone else's mortgage when you can be building equity? That's a thought too...a better one! :thumbs:

24 June 2007: Leaving day/flying to Dallas-Fort Worth

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Who says you have to own a home. Would you believe some people are happy to rent??? Now that is a thought :innocent:

Renting is OK as a temporary measure, but why pay someone else's mortgage when you can be building equity? That's a thought too...a better one! :thumbs:

My house has been losing value since about mid-2005. During this ride to the bottom, my mortgage payments haven't increased my equity in my home.

Man is made by his belief. As he believes, so he is.

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Thailand
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LOL, what high house prices? Houses in Dallas are cheap cheap cheap.

Yes well someone that pretends they can afford the mortgage, taxes utilities etc on a $200,000+ home when their salary may only be $35,000 is going to run in to problems down the line.

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I-129F

Petition mailed to Nebraska Service Center 06/04/2007

Petition received by CSC 06/19/2007...NOA1

I love my Siamese kitten...

Filed: Timeline
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LOL, what high house prices? Houses in Dallas are cheap cheap cheap.

Yes well someone that pretends they can afford the mortgage, taxes utilities etc on a $200,000+ home when their salary may only be $35,000 is going to run in to problems down the line.

$200,000 homes?

Not where I live. No $35,000 salaries, either :P

Man is made by his belief. As he believes, so he is.

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Thailand
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LOL, what high house prices? Houses in Dallas are cheap cheap cheap.

Yes well someone that pretends they can afford the mortgage, taxes utilities etc on a $200,000+ home when their salary may only be $35,000 is going to run in to problems down the line.

$200,000 homes?

Not where I live. No $35,000 salaries, either :P

Well that's good to know, but your area is not in the norm then

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I-129F

Petition mailed to Nebraska Service Center 06/04/2007

Petition received by CSC 06/19/2007...NOA1

I love my Siamese kitten...

 

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