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Commercial Property

Help to Buy rush proves patchy across Midlands

People in some parts of the region were more than 20 times as likely to make the most of the interest-free Help to Buy loans than elsewhere.

A couple look at house prices in an estate agent's window

Almost 1,500 loans were agreed through the Government’s Help to Buy scheme in its first year in the West Midlands.

However, new data shows that people in some parts of the region were more than 20 times as likely to make the most of the interest-free loans than elsewhere.

Almost eight per cent of the 19,394 loans were handed out in this region, but while 18 out of every 10,000 people in Tamworth and Wrekin took advantage last year, only 0.8 per 10,000 from North Warwickshire did.

The Government said that 87.5 per cent of those to take advantage of the controversial scheme – designed to boost the housing market – were first-time buyers. The average loan was £36,999 and the average price paid for a property was £184,995, it added.

Meanwhile, it has been claimed the Government will enjoy a £4.5 billion boost as a result of a house price boom, which some have linked to the Help to Buy scheme.

John Fender, professor of macroeconomics at the University of Birmingham, said a year into the scheme he remains convinced it is not helping the housing market.

He said: “The basic problem is this pushes up house prices but doesn’t make any more houses available.

“If you make it easier for one person to buy a house, that means somebody else won’t be able to buy.