Can't speak for England but in Scotland, over 90% of LLs have 1 x property. So the high majority aren't sending their profits offshore and if it helps some pay for hols etc, so what? It's a business.If the Landlords can optimise their profits, why can't the state do the same and make profits, unlike the private landlords who take their profits offshore or spend it on holidays abroad, the state could use any profits to build more houses for rent or subsidise young first time buyers.
Used to be that people bought a house to live in, they looked forward to paying a mortgage for around 30 years, after which they owned the property and could then have something to leave to their kids.
Nowadays the market is full of opportunists who buy property as an investment or as a store of wealth, usually of dodgy origin, this practice is forcing up price's, .
Yes folk buy houses to live in, however folk have rented for decades ...
Up until about 1914 approximately 90 per cent of all housing in Britain was privately rented. This compares to only about 7 to 10 per cent at the end of the century, though from a low point of about 7 per cent in 1991 there had been a steady increase over the last nearly 30 years. It is now predicted that the privately rented sector will reach 25 per cent of the total housing market by 2025.
Taken from:
The Story of “Landlording” – a brief History – LandlordZONE
www.landlordzone.co.uk