Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

NewsTimes.co.ukNewsTimes.co.uk

UK NEWS

Third of millennials face renting into retirement, warns report

The number of families with children now renting in the private sector has risen threefold in 15 years to 1.8 million.

A third of millennials could still be renting by the time they retire, a report has warned.

And if current trends in home ownership continue, up to half of that generation – born between 1981 and 2000 – face the prospect of renting in their 40s.

The research, by think tank the Resolution Foundation, says a “generation of young people face the prospect of never owning their own home”.

Around four in 10 millennials currently rent privately at age 30.

That is double the rate at the same age as Generation X – now in their forties – and four times that of the baby boomers, who were born in the 20 years after the Second World War.

:: Millennials set to lose out further to parents

“Britain’s housing problems have developed into a full-blown crisis over recent decades and young people are bearing the brunt,” said Lindsay Judge, senior policy analyst at the Resolution Foundation.

“If we want to tackle Britain’s ‘here and now’ housing crisis we have to improve conditions for the millions of families living in private rented accommodation.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

“That means raising standards and reducing the risks associating with renting through tenancy reform and light touch rent stabilisation,” she said.

A record 1.8 million families with children now rent privately, according to the research, up from 600,000 15 years ago.

The Resolution Foundation recommends introducing indeterminate tenancies as the sole form of contract, following the lead of Scotland in a move that would guarantee stability for tenants.

Landlords should not be able to end tenancies without good cause, it added, and policy should rest on a “fair balancing of the needs of tenants with the rights of landlords”.

The report also recommended that rent rises should be fixed to the consumer price index and upped only over three-year periods.

Source:news.sky.com

You May Also Like

UK NEWS

Professing to be the lead in Thai relationship with over 1.5 million enrolled single people, Cupid Media’s ThaiCupid brings the one in every of...

UK NEWS

Read more about switzerland women here. Swiss ladies and men are not reknown for being the most chatty, outgoing or spontaneous when meeting strangers...

WORLD NEWS

An exclusive article form Orestis Karipis In the 1930’s and 1940’s acid was the weapon of deceived husbands and wives in the Western world...

FOOD TIPS

In food, if there is one thing you can say without fear of contradiction, it is this: Britain loves burgers. The UK market is...

Copyright © 2020 NewsTimes.co.uk All Rights Reserved