Brendan Burgess
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I wrote the following article 18 months ago:
Integrating pensions and home ownership
I think it's well worth revisiting this idea as there have been a few developments in the past 18 months.
The first development is that we have since become aware of how much higher mortgage rates are in Ireland than in the rest of the Eurozone. At the AIB Special General Meeting on Wednesday last, I made the point that AIB is charging mortgage holders about 3.5% on average for mortgages on their family home. In July, they issued a mortgage bond at 0.625%. I presume that most of the investors in this bond were pension funds.
So we have the ridiculous situation of Irish people borrowing money at 3.5% to lend back to themselves at 0.625%. It's a fundamental principle of investing that one should not borrow to invest. Because of the complexities of pension funds and mortgages, we lose site of the fact that, that is exactly what most of us are doing. If a person has a mortgage while they have investments, they are effectively borrowing to invest, even if that borrowing was initially used to buy their family home.
I am now going even further than my original suggestion 18 months ago. People should be allowed use up to [€200k] from their "pension fund" to buy their home or pay off the mortgage if they already have a home. Cut out the middlemen and their profits and charges.
Here is an example of what it would look like:

So, they have the same net assets, but their costs would be a lot less because they would be contributing less to the profits and costs of the mortgage industry and the pensions industry.
In practice, it could work something like this. Instead of contributing to a pension fund, the employee and their employer would contribute to a Home Purchase Fund which would attract the same tax reliefs as pension funds. When they are ready to buy a home, they use this money as the deposit. They take out a mortgage in the ordinary way for the balance. They can continue contributing up to [€200k] to reduce the mortgage as quickly as possible. When they have contributed their max, they can then start a pension fund proper. But their accommodation costs will be much reduced, so they will have more funds to contribute to the pension fund.
If they sell the house at any time, they would have to put the amount taken out of the House Purchase Fund back into the House Purchase Fund with interest. That money could only be used to buy another house or to transfer it to the person's pension fund if they did not want to buy a house.
Integrating pensions and home ownership
I think it's well worth revisiting this idea as there have been a few developments in the past 18 months.
The first development is that we have since become aware of how much higher mortgage rates are in Ireland than in the rest of the Eurozone. At the AIB Special General Meeting on Wednesday last, I made the point that AIB is charging mortgage holders about 3.5% on average for mortgages on their family home. In July, they issued a mortgage bond at 0.625%. I presume that most of the investors in this bond were pension funds.
So we have the ridiculous situation of Irish people borrowing money at 3.5% to lend back to themselves at 0.625%. It's a fundamental principle of investing that one should not borrow to invest. Because of the complexities of pension funds and mortgages, we lose site of the fact that, that is exactly what most of us are doing. If a person has a mortgage while they have investments, they are effectively borrowing to invest, even if that borrowing was initially used to buy their family home.
I am now going even further than my original suggestion 18 months ago. People should be allowed use up to [€200k] from their "pension fund" to buy their home or pay off the mortgage if they already have a home. Cut out the middlemen and their profits and charges.
Here is an example of what it would look like:

So, they have the same net assets, but their costs would be a lot less because they would be contributing less to the profits and costs of the mortgage industry and the pensions industry.
In practice, it could work something like this. Instead of contributing to a pension fund, the employee and their employer would contribute to a Home Purchase Fund which would attract the same tax reliefs as pension funds. When they are ready to buy a home, they use this money as the deposit. They take out a mortgage in the ordinary way for the balance. They can continue contributing up to [€200k] to reduce the mortgage as quickly as possible. When they have contributed their max, they can then start a pension fund proper. But their accommodation costs will be much reduced, so they will have more funds to contribute to the pension fund.
If they sell the house at any time, they would have to put the amount taken out of the House Purchase Fund back into the House Purchase Fund with interest. That money could only be used to buy another house or to transfer it to the person's pension fund if they did not want to buy a house.
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