CPFCSaturn
Member
- Country
England
If you want to actually spend the value of your home to live on, you either remortgage, which a pensioner can't afford to do. Or you sell. Why should they sell? It's their house bought and paid for. It's their pension they paid for too. It's hardly emotional or hyperbole. It's the realistic, logical outcome.
My home isn't included within my wealth - until I die. I don't count it as money - does anyone? Only the government and tax man - and clearly the statistics people where it suits them. Nobody's residence is their value. Now, second homes - like nearly every MP has. That's different. Tax that at income tax rates. But it won't happen will it.
Because having the option to refinance or sell your incredibly valuable asset for vastly more than you paid for it is a luxury most young people today will never have - framing that as someone being 'forced out of their home' is unnecessarily emotive.
Generation rent being hopped about every 12 months with never-ending rent increases, but god forbid a pensioner has to move home to realise enormous gains on an asset???
Absolutely my home is included in my wealth, because if I ever lost my job or fell into financial hardship, I am lucky enough to be able to sell it to get myself out of that hole.