LONDON, Sept 14 Reuters British house prices showed the most widespread falls in 14 years in August as demand weakened against the backdrop of elevated mortgage costs and economic uncertainty, an industry survey showed on Thursday.
The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors RICS house price balance, which measures the difference between the percentage of surveyors seeing rises and falls in house prices, slumped to 68 in August from 55 in July.
Thursday39;s house price balance marked the weakest reading since February 2009 and was below the 56 forecast in a Reuters poll of economists.
Simon Rubinsohn, chief economist at RICS, said the survey pointed to a sluggish housing market with little sign of relief in prospect.
Prices are continuing to slip albeit that the relatively modest fall to date needs to be seen in the context of the substantial rise recorded during the pandemic period, Rubinsohn said.
The survey results echoed other signs of slowdown in the property sector.
Mortgage lenders Halifax and Nationwide have both shown prices falling in monthly terms as the Bank of England39;s sustained run of interest rate rises, persistent inflation and a prolonged costofliving crisis squeeze homebuyers.
Official figures, released on Wednesday, showed the country39;s economy shrank by a sharperthanexpected 0.5 in July after public sector strikes and unusually rainy weather weighed on output.
Overall across Britain, RICS39; measure of agreed sales was the weakest since…