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Posted: 2023-02-05 18:52:26

When single mum Kerrie Boylett wanted to buy a home in 1995, almost all lenders turned her away.

Ms Boylett is now retired and aged 68, but back then she was 40, and had a nine-year-old daughter.

"It was a lot harder for me to get a loan as a single person and a woman — it was practically impossible," she tells ABC News.

Ms Boylett eventually convinced one lender to give her a loan. She bought her first home in Coogee, NSW for $150,000, with a deposit of 15 per cent (which she says was based on a decade of her saving).

Her variable interest rate was a massive 19 per cent and her income was low, making it a daily struggle to afford to live.

"It was really hard, really hard — I mean, I remember once I had the electricity cut off for three days," she recalls.

"There were no holidays until my daughter was 13. I would have dinner parties at my place for friends, instead of going out, by buying two kilos of meat and making a salad and spaghetti Bolognese and a cake. And that's how I had friends and entertainment — at home.

"I got the cheapest car I could get for $1,000 … It was a struggle the first five years."

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A decade of savings still isn't enough for most first home buyers(Nassim Khadem)

Her first home needed major renovations.

"It had no kitchen other than a basin in there at the time," she says.

"I got onto the Trading Post and bought a kitchen for $300 and put that in. And we painted the unit … my daughter and I just stripped the floorboards back — it was all about doing the work yourself."

After buying and selling properties over the years, Ms Boylett has upsized to a home in Balmain that's now worth far more than what houses were worth in the mid-90s.

She thinks that her generation – the baby boomers – gave up a great deal to make ends meet. She says millennials need to also make sacrifices in the journey towards home ownership.

"They [millennials] want you know, the latest mobile phone, the latest iPad, they want a nice car, they want to go on holidays, they still want to go out to restaurants they pay $20 or $30 for a drink if they go out, have a nice time," she says.

"You've got to say right, am I prepared to keep my phone for four years? Am I prepared to cut back?"

ABC News spoke to several economists and housing analysts as to which generation has had it tougher when it comes to breaking into the housing market, getting a home loan and paying it off to ultimately own their own home.

They say the answer as to who has it worse – the baby boomers (defined by PEW Research as anyone born from 1946 to 1964), Generation X (anyone born from 1965 to 1980), or millennials (anyone born from 1981 to 1996) — depends on whether you are looking at the plight of new home buyers or home owners in general.

The consensus is that while every generation has faced genuine struggles, the Great Australian Dream of owning your own home is becoming increasingly out of reach.

With more interest rate rises on the cards on Tuesday, and potentially later this year, that journey towards home ownership will take far longer.

The path to home ownership has become harder

According to Peter Tulip, chief economist at the Centre for Independent Studies, "home owners, or households, as a group are paying a larger share of their income in interest than they did in the 1980s, despite the fall in rates".

Dr Tulip, a boomer himself, who previously worked at the Reserve Bank of Australia and the US Federal Reserve Board of Governors, says this is because home owners now have larger debts, relative to both incomes and assets.

Peter sitting in front of bookshelves in his Sydney CBD office
Peter Tulip says households are paying a larger share of their income in interest than they did in the 1980s.(John Gunn, ABC News.)

He says although rates are nowhere near as high as they were back in the late 1980s, prices relative to incomes are twice what they were a generation ago and access to finance is harder. That means the path to owning your own home is more difficult now than it ever was.

"Home ownership is going to be increasingly difficult," he says.

"They're squeezed in two ways. While interest rates are high, they also have huge prices. And rents are also very high. So overall, housing affordability is one of the biggest social problems Australia is facing."

But Dr Tulip says if you are looking purely at the plight of a new home buyer trying to break into the market, they are better off in 2023 than they were in the 1980s, helped by lower interest rates relative to wages.

"Prices have risen much faster than incomes – but this has been more than offset by a larger decline in mortgage rates," Dr Tulip says.

"Whereas interest payments on a new home represent 38 per cent of the average wage now, in 1989 they constituted 64 per cent."

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Peter Tulip says "prices have risen much faster than incomes – but this has been more than offset by a larger decline in mortgage rates".(Centre for Independent Studies.)

Dr Tulip has only included interest payments, not repayment of principal because, "the latter reduces household cash-flow but doesn't change household wealth", he argues.

However, the larger property prices faced by current buyers mean their principal repayments would be higher, bring their overall loan repayments closer to the peaks of the 1980s and early 90s.

Dr Tulip says the ratio of median house prices to incomes has roughly doubled from 1989 to 2023. In 1989 it peaked at five times the amount but was less than four for most of the 1980s. By January 2023 it was 7.9 times, having peaked at nine times during the pandemic housing boom.

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Dr Tulip says the ratio of median house prices to incomes has roughly doubled from 1989 to 2023. (Centre for Independent Studies.)

While mortgage rates have fallen substantially more, declining by almost two-thirds, from around 17 per cent at the end of the '80s to about 6 per cent variable rates currently.

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Mortgage rates have fallen.(Centre for Indepdent Studies. )

But the interest on that loan is much lower and that more than offsets the higher prices, Dr Tulip says.

"The big obstacle faced by previous generations of first home buyers, especially in the late 1980s, was the high interest rates — I wonder how they were able to afford them," he says.

"Now, in contrast, the interest rate is more manageable, but the deposit is much harder to get."

He also sees more rate rises on the cards, with the cash rate hitting 4 per cent or more and variable rates reaching about 7 per cent or more.

"If inflation remains above the Reserve Bank's target, then we're going to need the cash rate to be well above the inflation rate — and that means a cash rate well above 4 per cent," he says.

Why millennials will take longer to pay off a home loan

Grattan Institute program director Brendan Coates says the baby boomer first home buyers found it harder when they first got a mortgage because of the interest rates of 17 per cent or more at the time.

But he agrees that millennials — despite having a lower initial mortgage burden — will have a harder road over the life of the mortgage because the loans they take on are so much bigger.

Brendan Coates
Brendan Coates says the baby boomer first home buyers found it harder when they first got a mortgage.(ABC News: Peter Drought)

He says boomers taking out the average loan in 1989-90, when interest rates peaked, paid a larger share of their incomes servicing the mortgage than millennials are today, even as interest rates have risen rapidly.

"Australians who have borrowed to buy a home recently, they're paying roughly 33 per cent of their income to service that mortgage today," he calculates.

"Whereas boomers back in the day, if they just recently bought, were paying up to 40 per cent of their income to service the average loan to buy the average house," he says.

And for Gen X borrowers that bought 16 years ago in 2006 , he says mortgage repayments peaked at just over 30 per cent of the average household disposable income, when taking out the average-sized loan at the time.

He says Gen Xers have had it easier than both the baby boomers in 1990 and the millennials today.

"And they've seen their repayments fall as well as interest rates have fallen over the course of the last 15 years," Mr Coates says.

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Baby boomer first home buyers found it harder to pay at the start of their mortgage than Generation X and Millennials did.(Grattan Institute.)

Further rate rises will make life even harder for millennials

Mr Coates believes further interest rate rises are on the cards this year.

Like Peter Tulip, he expects the cash rate could lift close to or even above 4 per cent, which would mean variable rates of about 7 per cent — and that will make life much harder for millennials.

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