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UK facing two to three years of falling property prices as risk of double dip recession increases an

Nicholas Wallwork

Nicholas Wallwork

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The UK is facing two to three years of falling house prices with the latest indices showing they are already declining and experts warning of a double dip recession. The latest figures from the Department of Communities and Local Government show that residential prices fell 0.3% in July compared with the previous month. The figures, which traditionally lag behind other house price surveys, also revealed a slowdown in annual house price inflation. This stood at 8.4% in July.

The average home cost £220,240 in England, £170,782 in Scotland, £147,770 in Northern Ireland, and £157,166 in Wales, the report said. There was also a North-South divide in England, with prices in the East, in London, in the South East and in the South West, all higher than the UK average.



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