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First-time homebuyer programs in other countries

Scottish row houses
If you are a first-time homebuyer, you know how hard it can be to get that initial investment together, even in times like these, when home prices are dropping and interest rates are low.
Yes, there are first-time-homebuyer programs of various types available through different agencies. But have you ever wondered what other countries do to help people who are buying their first homes?
If you lived in Scotland, you could get some special assistance through a government program that is just now being expanded for people trying to buy their own homes.
Here’s how it works:
First-time home buyers find the homes they want, but then only pay between 60 and 80 percent of the purchase price. The government picks up the rest, and holds on to its portion as an equity stake.
When the house gets sold sometime in the future, some of the sale proceeds go to the government to pay off that equity stake. If the homebuyers decide they want to pay off the government before they sell, they are free to do so. The whole arrangement is interest-free.
The Scottish government has been experimenting with the plan, called LIFT, and has made it available in limited areas, funding it with 24 million pounds. It has been so successful that the government is now expanding it to all of Scotland, and upping the fund to 60 million pounds.
Government officials hope the shared-equity idea will help not only first-time homebuyers, but home sellers as well. It is primarily aimed at low-to-moderate-income buyers.
To learn more click on http://www.cml.org.uk/cml/policy/issues/758

