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Is there a link between owning a house and conservatism? Intuitively I'd say yes, there is, and that conversely there's a link between renting and radicalism. Take a look, for instance, at this ranking of the percentage of people renting in various cities:

Berlin 87
Geneva 85
Amsterdam 83
Hamburg 78
Vienna 76
New York 70
San Francisco 65
Chicago 60
Brussels 57
Copenhagen 50
Stockholm 49
Helsinki 47
London 41
Oslo 30
Barcelona 30
Dublin 28
Athens 27

Aren't the cities at the top of that list some of the most radical? Surely it's no accident that people in cities like Berlin, Amsterdam, New York and San Francisco prefer to rent than buy? Surely it changes the whole tenor and texture of civic life in those cities?

But when Evan Davis asked contributors to his interesting investigation into the politics of home ownership, The Price of Property (BBC Radio 4) the same question, he got resounding "no"s all round.

Geo-demographic expert (and iMomus ultra-villain this week) Richard Webber -- author of the Mosaic consumer segmentation tool -- said that there couldn't be a connection between home ownership and conservatism because South Wales contains constituencies where Conservative MPs regularly lose their deposits, and yet South Wales has a high proportion of home ownership. Meanwhile, Labour MP Roy Hattersley and Conservative MP Michael Gove were busy agreeing that because three quarters of British people own their own home, and 90% aspire to, it's impossible to align home ownership with one party or the other. This, it seems to me, is akin to saying that if enough British people -- and all British political parties -- loved Hitler, loving Hitler wouldn't make you a fascist. Surely it's possible that property ownership has shifted the whole of Britain to the right, so that no political party now would dare propose a policy actively encouraging people to rent, or suggesting that renting is a virtue?

House prices -- which for the time being continue to rise feverishly -- drive the UK economy as well as every dinner table conversation. Home ownership is official policy in the UK; the government wants 80% of Britons to own their own homes. Currently, 70% do, the same percentage as in the US. The European average is 60%, though in cities like Berlin that can drop to a mere 13%.

British people borrow more money than anyone in the world to buy their homes. Ownership satisfies a deep need, we're told, in the British psyche: every Englishman's home is his castle. Owning allows you to decorate your place the way you want it, to express yourself, even if in practice that just means that your substandard, identikit, vastly overpriced house has a front door painted in a colour you picked yourself, and that instead of holding your habitat somewhat at arm's length, you hug its horrible chintzy bay windows, dingy garden and meanly-proportioned staircase close to your heart, regarding them as your very own special things.

The politician most responsible for Britain's recent surge in home ownership is Margaret Thatcher, who's quoted on the programme saying that Britain would only be united when everyone in the land owned property. Part of her mission to eradicate socialism saw her selling off public housing, now desperately scarce in the UK.

In fact, owning property has long been at the heart of the British political system. The Great Reform Act of 1832 linked it directly to the right to vote. You could only vote if you owned property worth 40 shillings a year in the counties or 10 pounds a year in the cities. This led to some strange anomalies: the London borough of Westminster returned the most radical MPs, only because property was so expensive there that everyone had the vote, which meant that radical views usually excluded from parliament had to be heard.

Britain in the 19th century was a country where the majority of people rented their accommodation. The Conservative party made it policy to extend property ownership to a wider group in order to fend off threats to property from liberalism, radicalism and socialism. These threats were very real -- Marxism threatened the abolition of private property altogether, and the Liberals and Socialists were generally against it. Meanwhile, as you can read here, withholding rent was a powerful political tool for the working classes. A rent strike in London's East End helped win the Dockers Strike of 1891, for instance, and there were further successful rent strikes during the First World War and in the late 1930s. People who own property tend not to go on "mortgage strike" in support of their brothers in the mines.

What about Japan? Well, occupier-owned homes account for 60.3 % of homes in Japan, the same as the general European level. But, unlike in Britain, ownership in Japan is declining. Many young people are renting, and will rent for life. The Tokyo rental sector is expanding 4% a year, and is at record levels. Meanwhile, ownership is not seen as a good investment; property prices continue a long, slow slump from the absurd over-valuations of the Bubble period.

Journalist, photographer, artist and iMomus all-round superhero Kyoichi Tsuzuki puts a more human face on this situation in his preface to Archilab Japan 2006: Nested in the City. Tsuzuki, author of the Toyko Style photo book, is rather down on architects in general.

"For young people," he writes, "interior design is unimportant. Anything will do, a bit like camping in the mountains. Camping is not a desire in itself. What counts is the desire to be in the mountains. Likewise, young people first choose to live in a city they like. Then they rent a room to live in. As for the rest, they know how to take advantage of what the city offers. Indeed, what could be simpler when meeting with friends than to transform the corner pub into a dining room, the places where one meets for a drink, to dance, listen to music into a living room, or the gym into a bathroom. All these functions can be projected outside because they are available in the city. In the end, only the sleeping function remains attached to the room."

This dependence on local services as extensions of one's tiny living space makes for an effervescent and vital city, with lots of youthful fizz in public places.

"Nowadays," continues Tsuzuki, "young urbanites no longer feel any compelling desire to be anchored... Singles for the most part, they tell themselves that, if they had enough money, they would spend it on travelling abroad. This is the first generation that is really aware of the possibilities available to it, possibilities that no longer require them to become attached to one city. For those broken to life in New York, taking a plane to Paris or Tokyo from Kyushu amounts to virtually the same thing."

Obviously this is a lifestyle I totally recognize and identify with, and places where a lot of people feel this way are places I fit right into. There's something in the spirit, the feel, the texture of towns like this that's like oxygen. And maybe -- just maybe -- what's so liberating is the lack of brick-and-mortar conservatism.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-09 09:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] barnacle.livejournal.com

"For those broken to life in New York, taking a plane to Paris or Tokyo from Kyushu amounts to virtually the same thing."



That's a bit of a vapid, late 1990s analysis, isn't it? To what extent is climate change on the cultural agenda in Japan? I'd have thought they'd be shitting bricks about it, as there's presumably only so much land they can afford to lose to flooding.



Arguably, although we wouldn't have rental strikes without rents, that's hardly an argument for having a rental economy: we wouldn't have rental strikes without class injustice either, but I'm not a cheerleader for squeezing the proles. It strikes me that renting is as much a cause of class divide as a weapon in it: certainly I've met a number of buy-to-letters who need to be humanely killed, and it's only the rental market that keeps their head above water.

I think what will puncture any bubble of renting-as-freedom utopia is that this middle ground is fundamentally unstable. Such a society will swiftly (on economic timescales) either move to a homeowner economy or a predominantly landlorded economy, with the inbetween model hard to sustain. Even Japan, it seems, is hurtling from one extreme to the other rather than achieving any sort of stability.



And I always cringe when I hear that phrase Tsuzuki uses: "for young people." Talk about cementing a cultural hegemony. So very Radio 4; so invariably inaccurate. Would we get away with talking about the UK demographic like that? "For young people, Chris Martin is very much a role model." "For young people, mobile phones and 'iPodules' are the new hip thing." "For young people, to live in N1 6HG is to live the dream."

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-09 11:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
You have to talk about young people here, because there is a generation gap which emerges, inevitably, when housing markets with a scarce supply of stock get overpriced and change hands for more and more money each year. A gap develops between those "on the property ladder" and those not. Those not being, usually, the young, who are late arrivals at this "highest bidder" version of Musical Chairs.

We didn't even go into the way governments want private property to replace their pension and health provision, something they wouldn't be able to go anywhere near suggesting if the majority rented.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-09 02:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] barnacle.livejournal.com
Well, there's a shift if you're only comparing 20-year-olds and 60-year-olds, definitely. But I can't see where you'd convincingly put a dividing line that doesn't include plenty of 50-year-olds.

I just don't buy the idea that high house prices can generate some sort of young person's movement towards rootlessness. I've never trusted that sort of generalization since I worked out how specific and isolated the gap-yar demographic is, but how many column inches it scarfed. It also seems like cause and effect are all the wrong way round there, in a way that sounds plausible but has no strong evidence to back it up; like saying that high availability of Mac OSX makes people more creative.

Being unable to afford a house is far more likely to make you utterly miserable and frantic than it is to put you in touch with nature. Perhaps Young People are becoming more miserable and frantic too, but Tsuzuki hasn't met any of them because they don't go to picturesque places, but instead stay in their rented houses and weep.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-09 02:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] barnacle.livejournal.com
Actually, rereading it, this all sounds very snippy on my part: don't mind me, though, as I'm having one hell of a bad day as usual.

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