As many posters have said, it is a complex situation and the governments position that each case should be judged on its merits is one I fully support.
Several of the posters here have clear cut cases where modest home ownership was their very reasonable aim and they are seeking assistance.
As against this there are people whose aim may or may not have been home ownership.
They may be typified by houses costs well above the national average and with foreseeable reductions in their future income that may have meant they might not have been able to finance their mortgage anyway.
They seem to be in a gray area as regards whether they deserve state assistance or not.
Finally there are the people who took out interest-only loans on properties they couldn't afford to buy by via an ordinary mortgage, as opposed to renting to live in such a property.
It is difficult to know how to address these people's plights, but the case for "losing their home" cannot be easily made - they were going to lose it at some point because their finance mechanism was unsustainable.
I fins it difficult to agree with the state supporting people who took a punt on the property bubble - I am sure there are arguments in support, but I go against this in my gut.
Several of the posters here have clear cut cases where modest home ownership was their very reasonable aim and they are seeking assistance.
As against this there are people whose aim may or may not have been home ownership.
They may be typified by houses costs well above the national average and with foreseeable reductions in their future income that may have meant they might not have been able to finance their mortgage anyway.
They seem to be in a gray area as regards whether they deserve state assistance or not.
Finally there are the people who took out interest-only loans on properties they couldn't afford to buy by via an ordinary mortgage, as opposed to renting to live in such a property.
It is difficult to know how to address these people's plights, but the case for "losing their home" cannot be easily made - they were going to lose it at some point because their finance mechanism was unsustainable.
I fins it difficult to agree with the state supporting people who took a punt on the property bubble - I am sure there are arguments in support, but I go against this in my gut.