SA Affordable Housing March - April 2020 // ISSUE: 81 | Page 5
EDITOR'S NOTE
Is renting really
‘dead money’?
i to
B
uying one’s own home is an aspirational pursuit,
governed by the fact that home ownership is widely
seen as a central pillar of wealth accumulation.
However, fed-up millennials increasingly fear they may never
be able to save enough money to buy a home, leaving an
entire generation disenfranchised by the property market.
An ongoing housing affordability crisis is entrenching a
generation dependent on parents to help them to get a foot
on the property ladder, with a growing number of millennials
giving up hope of moving out of home by age 30.
Even though millennials in South Africa are reported to be
purchasing homes in great numbers in recent years – according
to statistics supplied by property group Lightstone, almost 330
000 millennials bought homes in South Africa between 2015
and 2017 and 70% of them were first-time homebuyers – the
reality is that as a proportion of the millennial category of
people aged 22 to 37, it is a declining percentage.
Although the great South African dream of home ownership
burns brightly, rent may be no more ‘dead money’ than paying
interest on a mortgage. Researchers at EY in Australia recently
set out to explore whether it is time we changed the narrative
around rent versus buy, based on data from the past two
decades. Its report revealed that many people could be
better off renting permanently than buying.
In the model, two home seekers were given the
same starting capital. One invested in home
ownership, with the other renting a similar
house in the same location while also
purchasing an index fund. The
performance of their combined housing
and investment choices over time
were then compared. It revealed
that the renters that maintained
a leveraged investment in a
suitable index fund were
better off than those
who owed a property
in the same area.
“Rent is no
more ‘dead
money'
www.saaffordablehousing.co.za
r
than paying interest on a mortgage. We need a strong new
narrative about different ways for people to generate wealth
while consuming housing as a product, not an investment,
the report concluded. Whether home ownership or renting is
the better path forward ultimately depends on future rent
and house price movements, which are impossible to predict.
In South Africa too, bank interest rates are significantly
higher than in countries such as Australia.
Home ownership matters because it had been built into
many aspects of South African life. Much public policy
assumes that most people will own their own home,
especially affecting access to finance. Homeowners also tend
to save more and build wealth, although it's difficult to
determine whether this is because taking on a mortgage
imposes an external savings discipline, or because
households with better savings discipline are more likely to
buy their home.
Traditionally, the belief is that people rent because they
can't afford to buy where they want to live. The way for
consumers to turn buying their first home into a good
financial as well as aspirational decision, is to follow the
following common-sense tips:
• The bigger your deposit, the smaller the capital amount
you will need to borrow from the bank, which will have
a major effect on the monthly mortgage bond
repayment.
• If you can afford it, pay extra capital amounts and/or
extra funds into your monthly mortgage bond, over and
above the required minimum amount. This has a major
impact on shortening the period of the bond and paying
less interest to the bank.
• Shop around and look for properties in different areas,
including areas which are undergoing a revival.
Eamonn
[email protected]
MARCH - APRIL 2020
3