Generation Rent

Why You Can't Buy A Home Or Even Rent A Good One

Chloe Timperley author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Canbury Press

Published:23rd Jul '20

Currently unavailable, our supplier has not provided us a restock date

Generation Rent cover

The Guardian top 5 books on the housing crisis in the UK

''The housing crisis is just getting started,' warns Timperley in this important book.– MARTIN CHILTON, THE INDEPENDENT

'An essential read about a broken housing market.' – PETER APPS, INSIDE HOUSING

‘A lively account of arguably the country’s biggest social and economic problem.’ – MARTIN WOLF, FINANCIAL TIMES

For millions of Britons renting a home privately is the only option. By 2025, more people are expected to rent than own their own homes. Even members of Generation Rent with good jobs and skills have been priced out of the property market.

In this razor-sharp account of how a nation of homeowners gave way to a generation of insecure renters haemorrhaging cash, Chloe Timperley tackles the myths and mysteries belying so many attempts to ‘fix’ Britain’s broken housing market. 

She reveals who’s being shafted, who’s cashing in — and the radical steps we must take to give everyone a good home, whether rented or owned.

A fast-paced jaunt around both buying and renting in Britain, Generation Rent is the essential guide to the UK's ruinously expensive property market.

Revealing how the UK came to have runaway house prices, Chloe Timperley dispels the notion held by some older people that the current generation of young people can't buy homes because they are feckless and squander their money on avocado toast.

First, she charts the rise and fall of council housing. From the early 20th Century onwards, high-quality public sector homes provided plentiful affordable homes that mixed social groups well. Then Margaret Thatcher's Right to Buy sold off local authority housing and the number of council homes for rent crashed. Some council estates became known as 'sink estates', killing the municipal dream of post-war planners.

As a result, from the 1980s onwards, more renters in Britain have come to rely on the private rental sector. Backed by generous incentives from successive governments, renting has become a lucrative form of investment and credit has boomed. Buy to Let pensioners and private equity companies have moved into the market, buying up and renting out houses and flats. Most would-be first-time buyers have been outcompeted and priced out. 

For those who can afford to buy, Generation Rent ...

'A sobering non-fiction read this month is the well-researched Generation Rent... 'The housing crisis is just getting started,' warns Timperley in this important book.'

– MARTIN CHILTON, THE INDEPENDENT


'An essential read about a broken housing market... We meet the victims of revenge evictions, botched repairs and bullying landlords and hear about mushrooms blossoming out of the mould on the walls as the rent cycles ever upwards.'

– PETER APPS, INSIDE HOUSING


A lively account of arguably the country’s biggest social and economic problem.’

– MARTIN WOLF, FINANCIAL TIMES


‘There’s something rotten at the heart of Britain’s housing sector, which is blighting the dreams of millions of young people. Generation Rent dissects this morbid condition, with rigour and passion — and shows us a way to treat it.’

– OLIVER BULLOUGH, MONEYLAND


‘“Generation Rent is ultimately the story of how the UK turned its youth into an asset class.” From that powerful opening uppercut, Chloe Timperley lands punch after punch on a rental system that is dysfunctional, demeaning and downright unfair … .’

– EOIN Ó BROIN TD, IRISH TIMES

ISBN: 9781912454266

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

342 pages