MyCRA Specialist Credit Repair Lawyers

Tag: housing affordability

  • What’s happened to Gen Y – our emerging first home buyers

    The future of our housing market, rests with Gen Y. Have we prepared them enough? We look at the particular crisis they face with housing finance, and credit defaults what the ramifications could be for their future and ours.

    couple outside houseBy MyCRA Credit Rating Repair and www.fixmybadcredit.com.au https://www.facebook.com/FixMyBadCredit.com.au.

    The older portion of Gen Y are in their mid to late 20’s. This age is the time when many previous generations have claimed their rite of passage by entering the Australian dream of owning their own property. But that was in the good old days of affordability.

    According to the Courier Mail in January, housing affordability seems to be eluding us. In 1981, the typical home sold for $48,000 just a little over three times the median household income of $15,000. But what do you do when wage rises have not matched property price rises? Today, the median home will set you back $408,000 about six-and-a-half times the median household income of $61,000.

    Property owners may say the market is low, but in reality despite a market slump, prices are still exorbitantly high for our first home buyers. Saving enough for a home can take years, and may require sacrificing the rental accommodation in preference for moving in with Mum and Dad just to scrape funds together. All of this effort may be lost, or not even attempted if you have poor credit history.

    The volume of credit available to young people pre-GFC was huge, and for people developing habits around credit, in hindsight it was extremely irresponsible to be throwing money at 18 -20 year olds and expecting them to know how to be responsible with credit.

    So many Gen Yers don’t have any clue why their history with credit matters, or how to commit to spending reduction and consistent habits of repayment because they have a history of getting what they want when they want it, and worrying about it later. Unfortunately the ‘later’ is now.

    We’re sorry Gen Y. Previous generations before you have failed to pass on the skills necessary to give you the right habits of mind to keep you out of trouble and allow you to accomplish the big goals. Goals like property, education, business or starting a family.

    This has been confirmed in two ways. Credit reporting agency Veda Advantage recently released some of their data from the last three years, which showed that Gen Y holds 60% share of all credit defaults. From telco defaults through to loan defaults – Gen Y tops the list in every category. Which invariably is a deal-breaker when applying for a mainstream home loan for the 5 year term of the listing. (See our release to the media today for more information).

    This may explain our latest first home buyer figures. The Australian Bureau of Statistics revealed two days ago that first home buyer numbers have fallen again, almost a whole percentage point from November 2012 to December 2012. (15.8% Nov 2012 down to 14.9% in December 2012).

    What Veda doesn’t tell us from their data, is how many people have defaults in this country. That we have to speculate on. Veda holds the credit files of approximately 16.5 million Australians. How many of those people have bad credit? Last year Fitch Ratings revealed mortgage delinquencies alone (mortgages over 90 days in arrears) were 1.6 % of all mortgages in the first quarter of 2012. So when we look at the number of defaults across the board, taking into account the more common defaults from telcos, energy providers and credit cards – we could increase that figure, to say 5%? If we assume that figure is correct, then 825,000 Australians have defaults on their credit file. If we apply the 60% rule, then 495,000 Gen Yers have defaults on their credit file. Pure speculation, but one that bears thinking about when we look at why interest rate cuts have yet to make a significant impact amongst first home buyers.

    finance educationWhat can we do to prevent young people from finding themselves in arrears and with credit defaults?

    Paramount to prevention, is education. Education about the wider, philosophical issues of finances so they understand where credit fits in to society and to their own lives, as well as the ins and outs of taking on credit in Australia.

    This should begin in schools, and be upheld in the credit arena, by government and the media.

    Second to that, is education and insistence on credit reporting accuracy. With defaults almost ‘a dime a dozen’ in this age group, could consumers get blaze about the process the Creditor took in listing the default? Could accuracy take a back seat and defaults pile up on Australian credit reports without an understanding of what constitutes a lawful listing? Every Australian needs to know that mistakes can happen on credit reports.

    Likewise, bad credit can be listed on credit files unknowingly. We have a responsibility to check our credit report, as the onus on ensuring accuracy rests with the consumer. This can be done for free – but many Australians don’t know this.

    They probably also don’t know that a credit listing should be tested against the appropriate legislation for its validity and its accuracy. The process of dispute is not easy, but Creditors should be called to account for any inaccuracy. Australians should also know Creditors have a legal obligation to remove a listing which was placed incorrectly.

    Changes for the better are coming in Australian credit reporting particularly around correction of credit reporting mistakes, but education is key for every credit active individual to make best use of these changes, aware of the action they need to take to ensure their rights are upheld.

    As the emerging generation into the housing market, Gen Y is at the forefront of this shift in psyche. Let’s hope they embrace it, and insist on changes that will benefit their generation into the future.

    Find more information on getting help with checking and disputing the accuracy of a credit listing, at www.mycra.com.au.

    Image 2: KROMKRATHOG/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

  • Australia still one of most unaffordable places to live?

    A housing survey reveals Australia as completely unaffordable…so how come so many people are so eager to fix their bad credit report and get in to the property market in Australia?

    By GRAHAM DOESSEL CEO of MyCRA Credit Repairs and www.fixmybadcredit.com.au.

    The Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey has continued to place Australia amongst its most unaffordable places to live, with our country held as the second most unaffordable housing market.

    325 urban markets were featured in the survey, from the United States, UK, Canada, Australia, Ireland, New Zealand and Hong Kong. It rates housing affordability, based on the Median Multiple – that is, the median house price divided by the gross annual median household income of specific urban markets, for the 3rd Quarter of the previous year.

    Featured in Broker News, the survey pinpointed Sydney as the third costliest city in the world – dropping it one spot from last year.

    But overall affordability is still looking grim for Australia on a world scale, according to Demographia.

    “While Hong Kong is the most severely unaffordable housing at a staggering 12.6 Median Multiple (the highest ever recorded within the history of the Surveys) – Australia with its abundant land supply has the most pervasive housing affordability problem (5.6 MM); followed by New Zealand with a small population of just 4.4 million (5.2 MM); the United Kingdom (5.1 MM); Canada (3.5 MM); Ireland with its housing bubble collapsing (3.4 MM) while the United States overall is affordable (3.0 MM),” Demographia says.

    Australia’s national unaffordability ratio came down from 6.1 times in 2010 to the still ”severely unaffordable” ratio of 5.6 times. They claim reduced house prices helped slightly improve the rating.

    So are we struggling to keep our heads above water in this country? That point is interesting.

    Certainly our homes are expensive, and it is a struggle for many people to break in to the housing market. Coupled with the tight lending criteria of banks, including requiring a squeaky clean credit rating, who could be blamed for thinking we live in a very unaffordable country?

    The Australian Property Forum argues differently. It says the Demographia survey should be ‘debunked’ and is not an accurate reflection of Australia’s affordability scale:

    “But almost half a million families and individuals bought homes in Australia last year. So while housing may be unaffordable to some (has it ever been otherwise?) plenty of people do seem to be able to afford to buy houses. So how come so many people are buying houses in a country that Demographia claims to be completely unaffordable? APF says.

    APF says there are substantially different factors impacting the housing markets in each country:

    * Differences in tax rates and cost of living pressures across various countries make a comparison of spending power based on gross income meaningless.

    * A better measure of a household’s ability to afford property would be to consider household discretionary income and total wealth. This would include non-wage income (such as income from interest, shares or other investments), and wealth stored in other assets (such as shares or equity in existing property) that may be liquidated or borrowed against in order to fund a new property purchase

    * Rental income (and real income from any other investments including savings interest) should be included, along with any liquid assets or easily leveraged assets such as equity in existing property. The reality is that people can and do use those forms of wealth to buy property.

    * The official median house price figures that Demographia use for Australia are sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. However these ABS figures only include freestanding houses. They don’t include units or townhouses, meaning that Demographia are overstating median house prices in Australia compared to the other countries assessed in their survey (countries where units and townhouses are included when calculating the median house price).

    So what is the real measure of affordability?

    I am sure millions would suggest housing is unaffordable for them, particularly in our capital cities where the dream of home ownership has become a distant memory for many first home buyers.

    But in reality, people are still managing to purchase.

    Every day, we see hundreds of people desperate to buy homes. Who CAN afford to buy, but who are held back not by affordability but by their bad credit history.

    I guess the truth lies somewhere in the middle.

    For more information on credit repair before buying a home, contact us on 1300 667 218 or visit the main site www.mycra.com.au.

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