by Workingman » 24 Jun 2023, 12:34
Yes, Cromwell!
I have a few nieces and nephews in their number whose parents went through the double-digit mortgage rates and the repossession period of the late 80s and early 90s who tried to warn them.
Their children were born in the 90s so for most of their adult lives the rate has been at 2% or lower - until now.
I know from family chats that they were warned to spend as though rates were at 5%-6% and to put some money away in things like ISAs or even normal savings accounts.
Unfortunately, and I know this is a generalisation, many did not want to buy small and trade up or be seen driving around in a 10yr-old Fiesta or Corsa. They wanted bigger and they wanted new and they wanted them now, and that has come back to bite them.
What I found interesting in Hunt's statement about his mortgage flexibility plan, a key point, was that he did not want it to hurt a borrower's credit rating! What?! The last thing a borrower having trouble to pay is to take on more debt.
Maybe we need different maths pathways in schools. One for pure maths, calculus, differentiation and integration etc, and one more practical for everyday needs such as personal, household, credit and working money finance.