This is because private housebuilders have a commercial interest in not building so many new homes that their average price declines.
at the University of Oxford."Things like drug overdoses, alcohol-related deaths, accidents, homicides and suicides."
The UK, particularly Scotland, has seen a rise in drug-related death rates, he says."These causes are usually improving for other Western European countries so we are seeing a divergent effect."Commenting on the overall trends at all age groups, a Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: "We inherited an NHS that was broken and we are determined to fix it.
"Through our Plan for Change we are shifting focus from sickness to prevention and targeting the drivers of ill health and catching the biggest killers earlier."We are creating the first smoke free generation, stopping junk food ads being targeted at children and improving detection of diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular disease."
The CMI took weekly provisional death registration data from the
, for England and Wales,The temptation for young homeowners is obvious. A longer mortgage term would reduce monthly repayments.
But with the average age of first-time buyers rising - it now stands at nearly 34 - the question of how people will be able to afford mortgage payments when they hope to retire becomes increasingly important.UK Finance, the banking and lenders' trade body, said only 3% of mortgage-holders were currently paying off a mortgage after the age of 65.
While many young homeowners have chosen longer mortgage terms to make repayments more manageable, they may opt for shorter terms in the future if their salaries improve or they move house.That is why UK Finance expects only a small fraction of the mortgages taken out now to ultimately go into borrowers' retirement years.