MORE young people are giving up the dream of owning their own home, with high house prices and low incomes seen as strong barriers to getting on the property ladder, a report suggests.
The proportion of people aged between 20 and 45 who are saving for a deposit to buy their own home has fallen by six percentage points compared with a year ago, to 43per cent, according to the Generation Rent report from Halifax.
The report said this fall "strengthens the view" that more people may be giving up on the idea of owning their own home and are instead accepting the idea of long-term renting.
Schemes such as Help to Buy have enabled people to get on or move up the property ladder with a low deposit, but while 53per cent of people said they believe the scheme has had a positive impact, eight per cent think it has had a negative impact and 39per cent don't know or are undecided.
The three most common barriers to home ownership that people who do not own a property gave were the size of the deposit needed, high property prices and low incomes.
People who do not own their own home said they would be willing to save for about five years and four months to save for a deposit, while people who are already on the property ladder would be prepared to save for around three years and seven months.
Some 79per cent of 20 to 45-year-olds surveyed thought banks do not want to lend to first-time buyers.
Figures recently released by the Council of Mortgage Lenders showed the number of first-time buyers getting on the property ladder last year reached its highest levels since 2007. More than 300,000 people took their first step on the property ladder in 2014.
But Craig McKinlay, mortgages director at Halifax, said: "While there has been an increase in first-time buyers in the last 12 months, at the same time there is also a growing group of young people who believe they won't be able to get a mortgage.
"The difference between the reality and their perception needs to be addressed urgently if we are to prevent people from giving up on getting on the housing ladder."
The report gathered information from more than 40,000 20 to 45-year-olds and 4,000 parents with children aged between 20 and 45.
Guiseley mum Ruth Freer's 23-year-old daughter is keen to buy her first home, but faces years of saving for a deposit. "She's lived at home since finishing college and she's desperate to get her own place, but it's looking very likely that she will have to stay at home for much longer," said Ruth, 50. "In terms of the housing market, young people have it much worse than we did. When we bought our first house we only needed £1,000 for a deposit but it's astronomical now.
"I don't know how ordinary young people manage to get mortgages anymore. It seems your only hope of being a house-buyer under 30 is if you're on a particularly high salary or you have well-off parents who can help out.
"There needs to be more affordable housing and it needs to be spread wider across the region, so people have a hope of buying a home in an area where they grew up or want to live.
"It seems that we're returning to how things used to be before the war, when most ordinary people rented their homes. That wouldn't be so bad if renting wasn't so expensive, but the amount my son pays for monthly rent is more than our mortgage payments!"
Commenting on the report, housing and homelessness charity Shelter's director of communications, policy and campaigns Roger Harding said politicians needed to act to address the crisis.
"For the first time in decades, young people today are facing worse prospects than their parents because successive governments have ducked the question of how to fix the housing shortage," he said.
"House prices have now shot up to ten times the average wage, leaving 'generation rent' left with two alternatives - either carry on living with mum and dad, or pay out dead money to landlords.
"And with prices still on the rise, it's no surprise so many young people feel their dreams of owning a home are slipping out of reach. The only way to give generation rent any real hope of a home of their own is for politicians to deliver a big and bold plan that will finally deliver the affordable homes we desperately need."
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