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TODAY'S OTHER NEWS

JONATHAN ROLANDE: Why building more homes isn’t enough to fix our broken property market

EVER since Rishi Sunak stood in the rain and effectively announced he’d soon be moving house, Labour have been saying the same thing about its approach to the property crisis. 

Build, build, build. 

Now, this should be applauded. 

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I’ve spent enough time in this column arguing the need for us to turbocharge building.

So nobody would be happier than me to see spades in the ground. The early signs look positive. Before Parliament departed for their Summer Holidays, Angela Rayner, the minister tasked with overseeing the job, was at it again. “Increasing supply is essential to improving affordability,” Ms Rayner said in the Commons adding: “There are simply not enough homes.” 

She’s right. But she’d also be wrong to think house building will solve all of the problems we currently face - because it really won’t. It seems the mainstream media is now catching up with this theme.

This week one headline stated that Labour’s building blitz won’t end the housing crisis. It caught my eye, and I suspect there will be more like it to come . Look, building homes is a good start. A very good start. 

We’re always told its supply and demand that checks prices, so adding 370,000 new homes to the supply side will help of course. But with such a serious backlog, not to mention population growth, I suspect this will do little more than keep up with current demand. 

What’s more, as larger amounts of property becomes available and, in theory it becomes cheaper, surely more people currently living with mum and dad will decide they want to move, earlier than the current FTB age of around 35. 

The biggest problem is that a huge house building programme must overcome hurdles of finance, planning, labour shortages (the Polish population alone is down 200,000 since Brexit) only to then potentially be a victim of its own success as demand surges.

It will, I’m afraid take a decade to find out for sure if Labour’s plans will work. What really riles me are empty homes, which don’t take a decade to sort out. Right now 700,000 are empty and unfurnished with 260,000 being empty ‘long term’. 

This can be for a variety of reasons with the most obvious but probably least common being the ‘buy and leave’ popular in London and major cities – overseas investors parking huge sums of money in the safety of the UK. 

A far more common reason is homegrown. Our very own councils leave property empty thanks to a mixture of incompetence and a lack of investment to bring tatty homes back to use. 34,000 empty at last count. 

What other landlord would be mad enough to leave a home empty? Think about that when you next pay your council tax. These need to be brought back to use immediately. And what of the 22,000 empty garages owned by councils – not throughout the UK, that number is in London alone. 

Many of these disused and unwanted blocks could build multi-storey homes on free of cost land. We also need a culture of more collaboration with private developers and investors to expand the range of housing options available, including affordable and social housing developments. 

I’d like to see a summit in September where developers are invited into Number Ten and asked why many are currently not committing to larger projects. By listening and engaging the Government might find the answers to a problem that affects us all.

https://jonathanrolande.co.uk/

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    I've been banging on about a particular issue to do with housing shortage since 2015. It's all very well saying build more homes and the price of them will come down, but I simply can't see this as being the case. I think the exact opposite is true. We already have the biggest building site since WW2 going on in Ukraine and it gets bigger by the day. If the UK was to launch into a major building programme then what will happen to the price of materials? The price of land? The price of labour? All will likely increase, raising the cost of new-builds, which in turn drags up the price of existing stock.

    I agree with Jonathan that there are a lot of brown field sites such as the garages he mentions (a very interesting statistic) but there's plenty of MOD land that could be used too. It is of course a question of whether the land is in the right places.

    We should also not rely on the traditional building companies to solve the under supply. It is their role to make as much profit as they can for their shareholders, in fact it is their legal obligation. It is well beyond time that Government brought back Development Corporations and set up factories to make modular homes that can be constructed on site with low-skilled labour. Such methods would to some extent mitigate the variable UK weather as well as keeping costs low in an attempt to make house purchase affordable for many more people. Profit must be made of course and that can be fed back into the local communities to improve infrastructure.

    Personally I don't think we'll ever truly get to grips with housing shortages whilst the population expands as it is doing, and there seems to be little evidence of our current Government likely to get to grips with that. I'd suggest one minor (and yes it is minor) opportunity to move in the right direction and that is in the area of the many people that come to the UK to work and add to the economy. I have no stats but it seems to me that many would like to return to their own countries when they reach retirement so why not make it easy for them? A points system could be devised, which would for example benefit key workers. The more points the better the assistance which could for example be in the form of a tax rebate. If people take advantage of this and return to their country of origin (particularly as they get older) then it has the added benefit of taking pressure off of the NHS and so forth.

    There are so many things that can be done but there is no evidence yet of a coherent plan.

  • Richard Copus

    Empty homes are a national scandal. Just walk down the average High street and look at the vast number of vacant rooms above shop premises. Most of these premises were built between 1860 and 1939 for people to live in above the shops below, which they did until a generation ago. Now these flats are used for cheap storage. They account for thousands of potential new homes and are in the most enviromentally sustainable locations.
    I'm not sure about immigrants wanting to move back to their old countries when they are older. Most of them have become as British as most of us reading this article by then and do not want to go back to a country that has become foreign to them.

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