I didn't know it understand the phrase "sink estate" so I looked it up and found this. Do other's agree with this explanation:
"Sink estates were largely created by the 'right to buy' system popularised by the Conservative party in the 1980s and 1990s.
Council tenants in more popular areas (ie prosperous larger, terraced or semi-detached properties) were far more likely to want to buy their property and also more likely to be able to secure a mortgage from building societies.
This left the less popular areas (usually run-down inner-city areas, no-go areas and those with higher crime rates or far less attractive housing) still under council ownership.
The councils at the time were rate-capped and had limited budgets for improvements or refurbishments.
This in turn exacerbated existing social problems and further alienated or isolated the people left 'abandoned' in those areas from wider society.
The origin, date and definitive meaning of the term 'sink estate' is, however, unknown. Or, at least, I couldn't find it.
The phrase is relatively new and came into usage in the 1990s, and was probably a term coined by journalists."
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