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Cost of living is up, and interest rates are up. What does this mean for you?

Cost of living is up, and interest rates are up. What does this mean for you?

It was always going to be the case that when the cost of living (inflation) increases, interest rates would follow suit.

Cost of living increases we have recently seen are the price of food, materials, and fuel – all have surged, with the cost of new houses also rising at the same time. 

But why is the rising cost of living (or inflation) linked to a rise in interest rates?

Simply put they are linked because one offsets the other. It’s like your car got overheated (inflation) so you turn it off and cool the motor down so it can keep operating in the long run. The main points are:

What will an interest rate rise mean if you are a homeowner with a mortgage? 

It will mean you pay more for your home loan each month. Which will mean you have less to spend. Which is exactly what is intended – to slow down that overheated car (economy).

Many home buyers paying record prices for properties may have limited capacity to withstand high-interest rates with their repayments. This can create mortgage stress as more money goes to the mortgage and there is less for everything else. It also means that housing prices will drop bursting the bubble but ultimately leaving people with less equity in their home. 

What about non-homeowners: would rising interest rates see cost of living go down? 

Higher interest rates will lower inflation and thus benefit both savers and non-homeowners generally. 

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