Help for people struggling with their mortgages is being kept “under review”, housing secretary Michael Gove has said.
But any financial assistance would be a decision for the Treasury, he told Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg.
According to the BBC, the Treasury has no current plans to give mortgage relief.
It comes as the average interest rate on a new two-year fixed mortgage is likely to exceed 6% in the coming days as lenders grapple with upheaval in the sector.
Asked on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg whether the government would consider stepping in to help those struggling to repay their loans, Gove appeared to rule out any help similar to Covid or energy bill schemes, as there are fears that this could push up interest rates further.
“The worst thing to do would be to spend money to provide a short-term relief which would then mean that our overall finances were in a weaker position, and interest rates were higher for longer, and inflation was higher for longer,” Gove said.
A Treasury source added that a bailout for homeowners would be “self-defeating” because it would push up inflation and prompt the Bank of England to further raise interest rates.
The Sunday Times reported that the Treasury has ruled out mortgage support for this and other reasons. Instead, it will ask banks to do more to stop people losing their homes.
If it is decided to help out people with mortgages this will probably be financed by the Government as they won’t want to upset the markets who really run things and have the power to bring them down (look at what happened to Liz Truss Liz Truss when she upset the markets).
Next it will be the turn of tenants to be subsidised. Any help they will get will be funded by landlords in the form of rent controls and eviction bans. The Government are not worried about upsetting landlords as we don’t have the power to bring them down.
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