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Worried about your nest egg? |
The financial crisis has not had the seismic effect many
were expecting on the capitalist system, but in its wake is it time for us to rethink how we go about living and saving?
Since 2009 salaries in both the public and private sector
have stagnated, while inflation has risen making everything from the weekly
grocery shop to housing costs more expensive.
Pension funds took a battering on the stock market, with
many now planning for retirement with much less in the bank.
House prices, particularly in London, have continued to
rise, and the cost of renting in the capital has become unsustainable for those
on lower salaries.
All this has resulted in low consumer spending as people
scrimp and save to afford life’s basics.
However, for younger people in particular should this
actually be seen as an opportunity to change the way we pay for life and more
specifically cope with retirement.
A recent press release by financial advisors deVere suggested
people should be saving over £800/ month by the time they are 30 to afford to
maintain their lifestyle during old age, while a Barings Asset Management
survey suggested people under 35 expect just 40% of their retirement income to
come from a traditional pension.
The key issue with both of these statistics is they assume
what could be a called a “traditional retirement”, but the kind post-work
lifestyle our grandparents, or parents will be able to enjoy will not be
available to the current groups of under 30s.
The main reason for this is the current crop of
whippersnappers is the first generation who will probably never be able to
afford to buy a house. This might seem extreme, but it is true.
Currently statistics suggest people are having to borrow, on
average, £200,000 to get on the property ladder and pay about £50,000 up front
as a deposit. For the vast majority of people this is unrealistic.
In the past this was less of an issue as people could expect
to inherit a property, but with these conditions our children, and even us,
might not even have this luxury.
However, panic not, because this could end up being the
saving grace for our generation.
House prices are high because developers are not building
anything affordable. Instead they build more expensive houses which are then
sold as buy-to-let properties, which are rented out at highly inflated prices.
Although there has been outcry over the cost of renting, so
far little has been done to tackle the problem, but this is likely to change.
The last 10 or 20 years have proved no amount of well-meant
rhetoric is going to get low-cost housing built in this country, because
private developers make more profit with selling to the buy-to-let market,
which realistically could result in a renters, rather than a buyers, market.
Over the course of your lifetime renting is of course more
expensive, however, on a month-to-month basis is not as financially challenging
as saving for a deposit or paying of a mortgage.
Renting also ticks the social mobility box. With jobs likely
to start migrating from the capital, renting rather than owning offers a level
of flexibility the younger generation is keen on in their working lives.
People who own a home are far more socially immobile as they
have set roots, whereas renters are able to move much more freely, particularly
when it comes to taking a new job, or moving to a different part of the
country.
Germany offers an interesting comparison here. In das
Vaterland home ownership is not the obsession it is in the UK. For example, in
2011 90% of the residential property in Berlin is rented.
Even in German states where buying is the most popular
option, renting still accounts for 40% of the market.
There are many reasons for this, including Germany not
experiencing a housing boom like the UK, but rental costs are still 30-45%
lower than UK equivalents.
How they have managed this is quite simple. There is so much
competition for rented property landlords put prices down, not up.
This model is something the UK, and other countries suffering
from similar problems, will have to look at.
Admittedly it would be impossible to recreate the situation
in Germany, but a sensible approach to how much rent can be charged (maybe
based on Council Tax brackets) could help make housing far more affordable and
remove the rather out-dated concept of home ownership.
Pensions are another area where the current crop of
under-35s could manufacture for themselves a better future by ignoring
traditions.
Every survey and statistic is based on leaving the workforce
at the current retirement age, but this assumption corrupts the results.
Hopefully this will come as no surprise to anyone, but
anyone under 40 will not get to retire at 65, mainly due to the pressures an
aging population is putting on the public finances.
When President Franklin Roosevelt introduced the New Deal in
the 1930s people were only expected to live 10 years after retirement. Today,
thanks to medical advances, better nutrition and generally healthier
lifestyles, people could quite reasonably expect to enjoy 20 or even 25 years
after leaving the workforce.
Although no concrete legislation has been passed on this
issue, those yet to reach the big three zero can probably expect to be working
until their mid-70s and possibly longer.
This results means, unlike our parents, the younger
generation will have at least a further 10 or even 15 years to save for a
shorter retirement, with the only unknown factor being the increase in life
expectancy, which many experts expect to rise at a much slower rate in the
coming decades.
In fact we have already started to see this happen, with
older people staying in work longer, or taking part-time work during retirement
to get themselves through the financial crisis, a factor which is having a
detrimental effect on the employment prospects of those just entering the job
market.
The idea of having to work later into life might seem
depressing, but this is not just a vague theory, it is in fact an economic
reality we will all have to learn to live with.
While the raising of the retirement age will come in
naturally over time, moving the UK on from the addiction to home ownership and
towards a rent-driven housing market is a much tougher proposition and will not
be easy to implement.
However, as fewer and fewer people become able to buy a
house this too might end up happening naturally.
For the first time in modern history, due to high house
prices and the cost of old-age care provision, children can no longer expect to
inherit a home, which consequently harms their chances of being able to get on
the housing ladder.
This, in time, should result in a competitive rental market
where rents are driven down by increased long-term demand, rather than up as
landlords try to appeal to more affluent tenants.
Overall, the most important factor in this change may be
growing demand for flexible housing as people travel further for work and as a
result require more leeway in their housing arrangements.
There are already numerous economic and human resource
studies which indicate generation Y in particular will change jobs more
frequently and demand increased workplace flexibility.
People should certainly not be discouraged from aspiring to
own their house or even taking early retirement if finances allow, but the
underlying point here is these economic forecasts are fundamentally flawed
because they assume a static retirement age and a maintained level of home
ownership, one of which is impossible and the other undesirable.
So next time you start worrying about how you do not earn
enough to buy a house or start saving for retirement take a deep breath a
remember the basis of society is changing and making assumptions about your
life 30 or 40 years in the future based on current conditions is a pointless
exercise.
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