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House Price Inflation The Only Good Inflation ?

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mikey4444 | 13:36 Fri 06th Sep 2013 | News
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-23983828

Once again, we are led to believe that a rise above inflation is good for houses but bad for petrol, gas, electric, food, etc. Never understood this and still don't.
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They're not taking all our houses now?
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House prices are driven by two factors only....supply and demand.
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not so much overpopulation as people having more than one house.
Never a good thing. When I was 22, a new flat in Ebury Street, SW1 was £11,000 and the top flour flat was £17,000. The first house I bought, at 33, in Manningtree ,Essex, had 3 bedrooms, good garden, and extensive views over the River Stour . It cost £27,500. I could afford the mortgage on that ; I earned over £10,000 a year.

Now, nobody of my age then could afford the mortgage now; the Ebury Street flats would be a million plus, the Manningtree house about £400,000. What person of 22 earns £3 million a year? What person of 33 earns £135,000 ? ( That's taking a mortgage at 3 times earnings) And that is universal.
Jake thanks for the link useful
hadnt realised the upper bound was 630 000

also it shows that the recent rises have not exceeded 2008 [wh I thought it had]

Fred London prices have always been astronomical

11 000 for a flat in sudduv 1850 was a helluva lot of dosh

my first mortgage was £12 500 on a annual salary of £ 5165 - but the seventies were a decade of inflation +++ - house prices tripling in 18 mo in 1974
which I rather missed out on but you might have caught.

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