Debates between Andrew Griffith and Fleur Anderson during the 2019 Parliament

Oral Answers to Questions

Debate between Andrew Griffith and Fleur Anderson
Tuesday 5th September 2023

(7 months, 3 weeks ago)

Commons Chamber
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Fleur Anderson Portrait Fleur Anderson (Putney) (Lab)
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3. What recent assessment he has made of the potential impact of the growth plan of 23 September 2022 on mortgage interest rates.

Andrew Griffith Portrait The Economic Secretary to the Treasury (Andrew Griffith)
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Over the course of 2022, high inflation from Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine saw interest rates increase across most western economies. The path to lower rates is through low inflation, which is why the Prime Minister made halving inflation one of our five priorities for this year. I am pleased that the latest Bank of England forecast shows that we are on track.

Fleur Anderson Portrait Fleur Anderson
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Mortgage and associated rental costs are soaring in Putney, Roehampton and Southfields, and the Government like to claim it is all due to global shocks or the war in Ukraine, but the latest Bank of England data from July shows that the cost of lending to buy a home remains higher in the UK than in Germany, Italy or France. Will the Minister finally concede that this difference is because those countries did not have the devastating growth plan or mini-Budget last year, and that it is because of this Government’s wider economic failure that my constituents face these costs?

Andrew Griffith Portrait Andrew Griffith
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I am glad that the hon. Lady’s constituents, among many others, will benefit both from our mortgage interest support and from there being almost double the number of mortgage products on the market now than in October 2022. I repeat the comment of my colleague, the Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury: if the hon. Lady is so worried about her constituents, what better way of helping them with the cost of living than to do away with the Mayor’s ULEZ tax?

Mortgage Market

Debate between Andrew Griffith and Fleur Anderson
Tuesday 13th June 2023

(10 months, 2 weeks ago)

Commons Chamber
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Andrew Griffith Portrait Andrew Griffith
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There are no plans to change that. Those are matters for fiscal events and for the Chancellor.

Fleur Anderson Portrait Fleur Anderson (Putney) (Lab)
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The Tory mortgage crisis is affecting my constituents in Putney, including a group of young sharers I met this week whose landlord has had his mortgage increased and has passed the costs down to them. They have to leave their home and the area because they can no longer afford to live in south-west London. The Minister has blamed global factors again and again, but the cost of borrowing is higher here in the UK than in other developed economies. Does he agree that this is a Tory mortgage penalty—a Truss tax—and that the Government are to blame for the 13 disastrous years of housing policy that have brought us here?

Andrew Griffith Portrait Andrew Griffith
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I do not agree with the hon. Lady, however fine her rhetoric may be. The reality is that, if we want the nation’s householders to pay less for their mortgages, we need responsible Conservative management of the economy. When it comes to her Putney constituency, the best thing that she can do, if she is on the side of those who wish to own their own home, is urge the Labour Mayor to build more homes.