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Money Matters: The housing market was supposed to crash, so did it or didn't it?

New statesman (1996), 2024-04, Vol.153 (5759), p.57-57

Copyright New Statesman Ltd. Apr 5-Apr 11, 2024 ;ISSN: 1364-7431 ;EISSN: 1758-924X

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  • Title:
    Money Matters: The housing market was supposed to crash, so did it or didn't it?
  • Author: Dunn, Will
  • Subjects: Housing ; Housing prices
  • Is Part Of: New statesman (1996), 2024-04, Vol.153 (5759), p.57-57
  • Description: Training yourself to question nominal prices can be useful for things such as choosing a bank account, asking for a pay rise (never ask for an amount: ask for a percentage relative to inflation), and making sense of house prices. With no increase in our purchasing power, we have been unable to benefit even when prices have been stagnant, and when theyve been rising almost everyone has lost out. The opt-out rate for auto-enrolment pensions has been rising since 2020, and first-time buyers are increasingly committing to very long-term agreements: half of all mortgages issued last year were on 30-year terms.
  • Publisher: London: New Statesman Ltd
  • Language: English
  • Identifier: ISSN: 1364-7431
    EISSN: 1758-924X
  • Source: ProQuest Central

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