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Lawyers call for stamp duty freeze



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Published Date: 22 August 2008
A QUINTET of leading Scottish property law firms has called on Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, to freeze stamp duty in an effort to boost the flagging housing market.
The ELPG group – which is made up of firms Warners, the Lints Partnership, Neilsons, Drummond Miller and Leslie Deans – has handed in a petition to Darling at his constituency office in Edinburgh urging him to consider either freezing all payments or
dropping the first £125,000 tier of stamp duty.

Leslie Deans, senior partner of Leslie Deans & Co, said that it was vital that the Chancellor of the Exchequer considered a complete stamp duty freeze to help revitalise Scotland's property market.

He said: "Compared to the rest of the UK, Scotland's property market is remaining resilient but we cannot just count on that continuing for the foreseeable future.

"First-time buyers are becoming increasingly reluctant to purchase a property and we have far more people selling than buying at the moment."

The last time a stamp duty freeze was implemented was in 1992 during a dramatic slow-down in the UK property market.

The tax is currently charged at 1 per cent on homes between £125,000 and £250,000, 3 per cent between £250,000 and £500,000 and 4 per cent over £500,000.

In a separate move, upmarket estate agent Savills called on the government to either exempt first-time buyers or levy the tax on the seller rather than the buyer.

It said: "We recommend the latter, although it could be seen as politically dangerous, opening the back door to tax on capital gains from property as it were."



The full article contains 277 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Spotty Geek,

Wauchope Street 22/08/2008 09:36:15
All these firms are in financial difficulty through lack of fee income and have had to lay off a lot of staff recently. I know this as my partner works for one of them.

Did't hear these greedy firms complaining when times have been good for the last 15 years, when property prices have shot up so much to make it so difficult for FTB's to buy.

We need prices to decline another 30% or so (to be at 2003 levels) before houses become affordable.

Suspending stamp duty may mean that this does not happen.

2

onecoleslaw,

Wit's End 22/08/2008 13:42:57
They're not lawyers, they're estate agents. There's a big difference and not pointing it out is misleading.
3

Angus McIonnach,

Embra 15/09/2008 21:33:32
Deary me.

If prices are to fall 30% with stamp duty then they'll fall the same amount minus whatever stamp duty costs. So, they'd fall 29%. And the other positive is that the buyer wouldn't have to pay money to the government for the privilege of moving house - the money would go to the seller.

How come the government gets to charge people for moving house? I mean, apart from the fact that they control the army and the police...

 

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