“If you have capital in this country,” Alex Hilton, director
of the advocacy organization Generation Rent, told me, “you can get other
people’s money.” Without capital, those of us who do not own property resign
ourselves to running in an exploitative rat race. The race is rigged, of
course, because some can never win. London was always a city where extreme
poverty lived cheek by jowl with extreme wealth, but the contrasts are starker
than ever where a majority is scrambling to make ends meet while a wealthy
minority treats the city purely as an asset base for investment.
The average home in London costs nearly 20 times the average
salary in Britain. The imperative to get a return on that capital investment is
passed on to the renter. According to the housing charity Shelter, Londoners
spend nearly three-fifths of their monthly income on rent.
In Stratford, the East London site of the 2012 Olympics, a
new postcode has appeared. E20 used to be the made-up postcode of the fictional
London borough Walford, from the BBC’s hugely popular soap opera “EastEnders.”
Now, it’s the postcode of the East Village, which was briefly home to the athletes
competing in the Games. The village’s cluster of affordable homes was available
to rent at 80 percent of market rates, which meant that they cost between
£1,244 and £1,688 a month (about $2,000 to $2,700). The average annual salary
is £26,500 ($42,600). Preparation for the Olympics saw lavish construction of
new motorways and roads, complete with segregated cycle lanes and rows of new
housing. The imposing £1.4 billion ($2.25 billion) Westfield shopping center
was built in 2011.
Tower Hamlets has experienced waves of migration, and is one
of the most multicultural areas in London. It’s also still one of the most
deprived, with half of the borough’s children living in poverty. Social
mobility has become social stagnation. With housing at a premium, London rents
are eye-wateringly expensive in comparison with the rest of the country.
Tenants turn to the state for help, but these are not welfare cases:
Nationally, over 90 percent of all new claims for housing benefits are from
households where at least one adult is working.
MPs of course, are lax on the issue. That may be because a
third of them are buy-to-let landlords. It has long been the consensus that
young people today will never enjoy the easy circumstances that the generation
before us could take for granted. But this isn’t just a generational issue; it
is a class issue. Day-to-day living is precarious for those not born into
wealth. Those without London’s capital find themselves at the mercy of it. London’s
housing is no longer for those who need it but for those primarily concerned
with accumulating capital.
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