More and more home owners are caving in under the pressure of home loan costs, choosing to sell the family home and go out to renting to ease financial stress.
A new study shows that between 2001 and 2009, 20% of home owners in Australia had decided to sell up and go renting. This is double the figures in the UK.
More than 50% of these subsequently returned to the property market, buying a cheaper property with a smaller home loan, however many others went on to apply for public housing and continued to rent.
The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology survey was based on the housing histories of thousands of Australians over nine years.
It found that former owners who did not return quickly to the property market were more likely to enter public housing or qualify for Commonwealth rent assistance than long-term renters.
It seems that the lack of housing affordability with escalating property prices and escalation costs of home loans are largely to blame for this trend.
During 2011, Australia has taken the unenviable title as the second most unaffordable housing market in the world.
Australia featured eight of the top 20 markets in which housing is ranked as being “severely unaffordable”, according to the 7th Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability.
The survey found that Sydney was the world’s second most unaffordable city, Melbourne sixth and Adelaide 18th.
The remaining capitals all feature in the top 50 with median house prices more than six times the average salary compared to the accepted international standard of three times annual income.
Furthermore Australia has suffered from a very high increase in mortgage defaults in recent months.
Investment services firm Moody’s said the rate of mortgage holders nationwide failing to meet their repayments rose from 1.36 per cent to 1.67 per cent between March and June.
Meanwhile, the number of homeowners facing mortgage stress jumped to 25 per cent last month from 21 per cent in June, mortgage insurance provider Genworth Financial said in its monthly Homebuyer Confidence Index.
Rental vacancies have declined to 1.8 per cent from 1.9 per cent, it reported.