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Ministers look at stamp duty cuts to help buyers



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Published Date: 13 July 2008
MINISTERS are looking at cutting stamp duty in the hope of kick-starting the housing market.
Under the plan, stamp duty 'holidays' would be offered to first-time buyers while other homebuyers could have the level of the tax reduced.

Another option would involve raising the price bands at which stamp duty is levied.

The tax is charged a
t 1% on homes bought for £125,001 to £250,000; 3% between £250,001 and £500,000, and 4% over £500,000.

The number of homes being sold by estate agents across Britain has halved over the last year amid signs the country is facing a property slump. Experts have been warning the Treasury that stamp duty is one of the key deterrents for those buying a home.

A Treasury spokeswoman said: "We are looking at a wide range of options and nothing is being ruled out. However, we are not in a place to take the final decisions."

Last month, Chancellor Alistair Darling held talks with senior civil servants and economists to come up with ideas for this autumn's crucial pre-Budget report.

A spokesman for the Department of Communities and Local Government, which is responsible for housing, added: "We are working every day with stakeholders to look at what more we can do during this difficult period for the housing industry."

A report published last week claimed it was "almost impossible" for people on low incomes to buy their own home due to high house prices and the large deposits being demanded by lenders.

A couple in the bottom quarter of earnings would have to save more than a year's worth of their take-home pay to get on the property ladder in Great Britain, according to the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.

The group said the increasing difficulties faced by people buying their first home were being driven by the huge deposits mortgage lenders now required, as well as the high level of stamp duty people had to pay.

Income for people in the lowest quarter of earnings has increased by an average of just 3.5% a year since 1996, while house prices in Great Britain have soared at an average rate of 10.3%.





The full article contains 377 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Andrew.,

Oxford 13/07/2008 10:40:41
Surely the purchaser of an "average" home should be unencumbered with stamp duty.

Whilst a system will never be perfect, a reasonable compromise would be the average price for the period from July 1st - Dec 31st prior to budget day should be the threshold for nil stamp duty for the upcoming tax year. England, Wales, Scotland & NI each having their own threshold...
2

Nebulous,

Aberdeen 13/07/2008 10:50:21
We are undergoing a much needed 'correction' in the Housing bubble. Intervention of this sort can have an effect - but not what they expect. All it and the £50 billion soft loans and the billions more for Northern Rock will do is drag the process out. So government has two options, both of them rather unpalatable. Sit back - it will be quick and nasty, then help people to pick up the pieces. Alternatively, spend a lot of public money they don't have and drag the process out over several years.
3

truthsleuth,

13/07/2008 10:50:39
All that these 'Government Giveaways' do is INCREASE the price of houses when they are already overpriced and the cause of mounting (mountain) debt.
4

Senga Jean,

13/07/2008 10:52:47
I find it difficult post devolution to distinguish whether descriptions like "Ministers" or "Government" apply to the Westminster Government or the Holyrood Government. Perhaps we could have a convention of say using London Government or Minister or Edinburgh Government or Edinburgh Minister. Perhaps better still just have the Scottish Government to run all of Scotland's affairs.

 

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