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Thousands of U.K. Help to Buy Loans Go to the Highest Earners

Britons who bought homes using Help to Buy could have easily done so without the support of the interest-free government loans.

Thousands of U.K. Help to Buy Loans Go to the Highest Earners
Commuter cross Westminster Bridge alongside barriers erected between the pavement and the road, in view of the Elizabeth Tower, also known as Big Ben in London, U.K. (Photographer: Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Tens of thousands of Britons who bought properties using interest-free government loans could have easily done so without any assistance, according to the U.K. public spending watchdog.

Help to Buy was introduced in April 2013 in an effort to make home ownership more attainable. Since then, the government has made around 211,000 loans amounting to 11.7 billion pounds ($15 billion).

Thousands of U.K. Help to Buy Loans Go to the Highest Earners

But a third of the loans went to buyers who could have purchased a property they wanted without help, and in around 4% of cases household incomes exceeded 100,000 pounds a year, the National Audit Office said in a report published Thursday.

The findings are likely to fuel criticism that Help to Buy is a blunt instrument that has subsidized high earners and boosted the profits of the big house-building firms.

Thousands of U.K. Help to Buy Loans Go to the Highest Earners

Under the program, recipients get a 20% loan, with no interest charged for the first five years, allowing them to buy a property of up to 600,000 pounds with a deposit of as little as 5%. In London, where house prices are double the national average, the loans cover up to 40% of the purchase price.

Officials estimate Help to Buy has aided almost 80,000 households who could not have bought a property without the subsidy, though take-up has been low in the least-affordable areas. With the program due to end in 2023, the NAO warned that care will be needed if the government is to meet its target of creating 300,000 homes a year from the mid-2020s.

In a separate report, the London Assembly praised Mayor Sadiq Khan for delivering the highest number of affordable housing starts in almost a decade last year but said that too few homes are being offered at the deepest discounts to those on low incomes.

“Government-imposed funding conditions mean that the majority of new starts are for intermediate tenures, despite the bulk of need being for homes at social rent levels,” said Tom Copley, chair of the London Assembly Housing Committee. “There is room for the mayor to go further.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Andrew Atkinson in London at a.atkinson@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Fergal O'Brien at fobrien@bloomberg.net, Brian Swint, Lucy Meakin

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