Negative Equity and British Housing in the 1990s: Cause and Effect
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Urban Studies
- Vol. 31 (2) , 181-199
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00420989420080191
Abstract
This paper is concerned with the emergence in Britain in the early 1990s of a large group of domestic mortgage holders with negative equity (i.e. whose property had fallen below the value of the mortgage advance used to purchase that property). The emergence of negative equity is traced to the conjunction of the long-term trend towards wider home-ownership in Britain and the effects of deregulation of the financial system in the 1980s. Using individual records from a major building society, the temporal, geographical and social distribution of negative equity is assessed. The results suggest that negative equity was far more likely to affect certain social groups living in particular places and that these appear to be the people least well placed to 'help themselves' out of debt. The concluding section attempts to draw out some of the policy conclusions from these findings.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Labour migration and housing in the UK: an overviewPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2018
- Business Reorganisation and Regional Development: The Case of the British Building Societies MovementEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1991
- The Politics of the Financial Services RevolutionPublished by Springer Nature ,1991
- The Regulation of Financial Markets in the 1990sPublished by Edward Elgar Publishing ,1990
- The Building Society Industry in TransitionPublished by Springer Nature ,1989
- Exogenous Voter Preferences and Parties with State Power: Some Internal Problems of Economic Theories of Party CompetitionBritish Journal of Political Science, 1981