Around 430,000 households across London – containing
990,000 people – spend more than half of their income on housing costs.
Analysis shows that the proportion of ‘housing pinched’ households in London
(those spending more than half of their net income on the cost of housing)
increased sharply in the years running up to the financial crisis – peaking at
around one in seven households in 2008. The analysis shows that people living
in London are significantly more likely to be housing pinched than the rest of
the UK, and the gap has grown in recent years. 71 per cent of London’s housing
pinched population are in working households – far more than the UK average –
and the majority (54 per cent) are renters, rather than homeowners. The
analysis shows that 24 per cent private renters in the capital spend more than
half of their income on housing costs, compared to 12 per cent of mortgagors
and 8 per cent of social renters. Read more on the Resolution Foundation
website.
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