I know that the government have been doing this for the last few years, but does anybody have any legal view on this scenario ?
25% of mortgage interest not an allowable expense
NPPR not an allowable expense
Property Tax, will be phased in as an expense.
Is this legal, i mean obviously it must be if they are doing it, but can the government just change the rules over night to suit themselves all the time ?
And perhaps you weren't a landlord at the time, but they did away with interest relief COMPLETELY for a couple of years (late 90s IIRC), then did a u-turn and allowed it in full, helping to inflate the bubble that's got us into the mess we're now in.
That's a very peculiar reading of history. You're forgetting the massive surge in rents in the 1998-2001 period, fuelled by a dire shortage of rental properties caused by the implementation of the 1998 Bacon Report, that made goldmines of unmortgaged rental properties, and the widespread panic amongst tenants at the time that they literally wouldn't have a roof over their heads if they didn't accede to landlords' frequent demands for rent hikes. It was this artificial phenomenon that drove the post-2002 bubble.
The 0% deductibility never made any sense back in 1998. The 75% deductibility makes no sense now. Interest is an overhead like any other. It should be treated in the tax code like all other overheads. (So should property tax and water charges.) Politically-driven ad-hoc tinkering merely creates distortions in the market and random positive and negative consequences (largely unforeseen) for those directly and indirectly affected.
The way I see it, and of course feel free to correct me, you effectively had speculators getting involved in the market, able to acquire 100% (or greater!) finance, and willing to let at a histrically low yield, because ll they were interested in was cashing in on capital appreciation over a fairly short time horizon.
That was the politicians' concern, and Peter Bacon's concern, but both forgot the plight of (mainly younger) tenants who wanted to rent instead of buying, and who were forced firstly into a rental bidding war as tenants and latterly into a second bidding war as reluctant buyers. Both phenomena fuelled property prices to unsustainable levels, in turn feeding the mania of the so-called property ladder and the mantra that 'only losers rent'.
We all know this didn't lead to a happy ending and sadly our grandchildren will yet pay for the consequences of this bungling.
But that's only one side of the equation surely, and the other side is the supply, of houses and of finance - and that's where the banks' irresponsible lending comes in.
With respect, irresponsible lending wasn't an issue in 1998-2002. There was, however, a serious shortage of houses and apartments.
I actually think that the restriction on interest relief is to try to level the field between owner occupiers and investors.
The owner occupier gets TRS at a rate for a period of time. All things being equal the owner occupier has more tax to pay on their salary and then get a rebate for a period of time. The investor gets marginal rate relief on 75% of the interest. So the investor is always better off.
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