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ank of England deputy governor Sir Jon
Cunliffe has told the BBC that the housing market poses the "biggest
risk" to the UK economy.
Sir Jon indentified "prices rising
faster than people's incomes" as a particular threat. "That leads
to... a big increase in the amount of debt in the economy," he added.
Last week, the Bank of England announced
measures to try to prevent the housing market overheating.
These included:
Ensuring lenders check mortgage applicants
can cope with a three percentage point rise in interest rates - slightly
tougher than current affordability checks
From October, limiting risky lending by
putting a 15% cap on the number of mortgages that banks and building societies
can give to people who want to borrow more than 4.5 times their income
'Sustained rise'
Sir Jon, who is the Bank's deputy governor
for financial stability, said a "sustained rise" in house prices
would be of concern.
"Some months ago I thought the biggest
risk at that point came from the UK housing market in Britain," he told
BBC Radio 5 Live.
"And it's not the risk around house
prices as such, it's the risk that we get a sustained rise in house prices -
and this is very important - (the risk of) house prices rising faster than
people's incomes.
"That leads to the sustained increase, a
big increase in the amount of debt in the economy, in the amount of debt that
mortgage holders have."
On Wednesday, the Nationwide building society
reported that UK house prices had risen above their 2007 peak, with the average
value of a UK property climbing to £188,903, and surpassing £400,000 in London
for the first time.
Last month, the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) warned the government that accelerating house prices were the greatest
threat to the UK's economic recovery.
It said rising property values could leave
households more vulnerable to income and interest rate shocks, and called on
the Bank of England to enact policy measures "early and gradually" to
avoid a housing bubble.
Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of
England, has also previously warned that the rapid rise in property prices
could be detrimental to the UK's economic stability.
He has emphasised the need to bolster banks,
so that they hold enough capital to reduce the risk presented by the housing
market.
Source: BBC
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