Household incomes have not risen at the same pace as house
prices for some time. And the gap between the two is getting wider: in
Portugal, house prices exceeded wages by 47.1 percent in the first quarter of
2022, making the country of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) where this difference is greatest.
According to a report by idealista, when looking at the
provisional data for the first quarter of 2022, it is clear that Portugal has
the biggest gap between house prices and wages – at 47.1 percent – being in
first place among the countries that make up this organisation. And it is not
the only one where house prices exceed wages by more than 40 percent: in the
Netherlands the difference is 46.8 percent, in the Czech Republic 46.2 percent
and in Canada 43.5 percent.
There are 25 countries out of 29 with available data (out of
a total of 38 OECD countries) where house prices exceed wages. But only seven
states have ratios above the OECD average, which reached 126.8 in the first
three months of 2022. Among them are - in addition to the Top 4 - Hungary
(139.8), Germany (138.4) and the USA (136.4).
Looking at Portugal, it can be seen that the gap between the
values of homes for sale and household incomes has increased: it went from
138.4 registered in the first quarter of 2021 to 147.1 in the same period of
2022, reaching the maximum value registered in the last five years. The leap
that Portugal's ratio made between these two points (6.3%) was higher than that
of the Euro Zone (5.2%), but lower than that of the OECD (14.5%).
House prices in
Portugal
House prices in Portugal have become 70 percent more
expensive in the last 12 years, according to Eurostat data, showing faster growth
than the European Union, since the average of the 27 Member States was 45
percent in the same period. It turns out that, although households increased
their savings during the health crisis, their gross annual income did not
evolve at the same pace as home values.
Wages in Portugal
The salaries of the Portuguese are rising year on year, but
at a much slower pace: between 2014 and today, average gross earnings have
risen year on year by between 0.5 percent and 3.6 percent. In 2021 income
experienced the biggest leap in recent years, from 1,315 euros/month in 2020 to
1,362 euros/month in 2021 (+3.6 percent).
The Portuguese statistics office also says that the average
total monthly gross remuneration per worker in the quarter ended in March 2022
was 1,258 euros per month, that is, a value only 2.19 percent higher than that
recorded in the same period in 2021.
What do you expect with this socialist Goverment. Sec Home buyers. Golden Visas. Masses of tourism. But are own people are left in poverty. Not been able to buy anything. While encouraging the rich of the world to come and make it holiday play ground and the filthy rich to change Portugal for ever. Shameful.
By J from Lisbon on 24 Aug 2022, 06:40
Agree most of what J says. However, not all foreign people who make PT their home are rich. One of the main problems here is Socialism. No public housing. No incentive for ‘buy to let’ investment because the taxes are insane. This has driven up rental prices and bad behavior by landlords who don’t have proper contracts to avoid the hideous taxes. This in turn causes people to not be able to save up deposits to buy their own property. It is a vicious circle that will not change under social govt that they keep voting for.
By L from Other on 24 Aug 2022, 11:41
Somehow the PS party continued to win the election, this is what happens when population decline is so bad, young people don't vote and are so underrepresented, they also tend to leave the country if they have any ounce of talent or knowledge, so the whole political system is completely dysfunctional and out of touch. I think Portugal would benefit more from a libertarian approach-- smaller government. But that will never happen as long as we have such an aged population that doesn't care about it's children.
By T from Alentejo on 24 Aug 2022, 15:31