Brendan Burgess
Founder
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An excerpt from my pre-Budget submission on behalf of the Irish Taxpayer
Allow people to take out a mortgage from their own pension fund to get on the housing ladder.
Allow people to borrow from their own pension fund to repay existing mortgages on their family homes.
People are finding it very hard to save up the deposit to buy a house. Why not let them borrow their own money from their own pension fund? Irish borrowers are paying 3.5% mortgage interest to the banks. Why don’t they pay this to their own pension fund instead?
This would have huge advantages
· More people could provide their own housing needs rather than relying on the state.
· It would make the mortgage lenders more secure as the Loan to Values would be lower.
· It would cut the cost of mortgages significantly. Instead of paying 3.5% to swell the profits of the lenders, they would be swelling the profits of their own pension fund.
· It would encourage young people in particular, to contribute to their pension funds as they would see them as a means of getting on the housing ladder.
This would have to be phased in over a few years so as not to disrupt the housing market. For example, it could be limited initially to first time buyers of new houses. It could also be limited to €300,000 or to half of the amount in the pension fund.
Allow people to take out a mortgage from their own pension fund to get on the housing ladder.
Allow people to borrow from their own pension fund to repay existing mortgages on their family homes.
People are finding it very hard to save up the deposit to buy a house. Why not let them borrow their own money from their own pension fund? Irish borrowers are paying 3.5% mortgage interest to the banks. Why don’t they pay this to their own pension fund instead?
This would have huge advantages
· More people could provide their own housing needs rather than relying on the state.
· It would make the mortgage lenders more secure as the Loan to Values would be lower.
· It would cut the cost of mortgages significantly. Instead of paying 3.5% to swell the profits of the lenders, they would be swelling the profits of their own pension fund.
· It would encourage young people in particular, to contribute to their pension funds as they would see them as a means of getting on the housing ladder.
This would have to be phased in over a few years so as not to disrupt the housing market. For example, it could be limited initially to first time buyers of new houses. It could also be limited to €300,000 or to half of the amount in the pension fund.