Housebuilding continues to climb but prompts criticism
02-21-2015
The latest housebuilding figures show starts on new homes in 2014 totalled 137,010 – 10% higher than in 2013 and at their highest annual total since 2007.
And in London, starts in 2013 to 2014 were the highest since 2005 to 2006.Overall 700,000 new homes have been delivered since the end of 2009 – and over 200,000 of which have been since the launch of the Help to Buy scheme.
Housing Minister Brandon Lewis said: "We inherited a broken housing market in which builders couldn’t build, lenders wouldn’t lend and buyers couldn’t buy.
We’ve done a lot to help get the housing industry back on its legs, but there’s more to do."(These) figures show we’re on track and turning this around.
Now, housebuilding levels are at their highest annual total since 2007, and first-time buyers are getting on the property ladder in record numbers."This is thanks to our long-term economic plan and efforts to tackle the deficit we inherited, which are keeping interest rates at their record low and mean now is the best time on record to take out a mortgage."The 2008 economic crash devastated the housebuilding industry, bringing building levels to their lowest since the 1920s and leading to the loss of a quarter of a million jobs.
But Henry Gregg, assistant director of campaigns and communications at the National Housing Federation, said: “These figures are a damning indictment of our failure to tackle the housing crisis. With building numbers below half what is needed, we’re creating a housing shortage that will be felt for generations to come.“Every year the country fails to build enough homes is another year that aspiring homeowners are priced out, young people are trapped in childhood bedrooms and families struggle with high rents.“Successive governments have stalled for too long on this issue. We urgently need a long-term plan for housing that finally delivers the homes we need. We’re calling on all political parties to commit to end the housing crisis within a generation and to get Britain building.”
The government has prioritised limited financial resources to housebuilding as a key part of its long-term economic plan. This includes:
- Helping people onto the housing ladder. Over 77,000 households have become homeowners with a fraction of the deposit they would normally require thanks to the Help to Buy scheme, with developers building more as a direct result.
- Reforming the planning system. Putting power back in the hands of local people to have a say over the future development of their area, meaning support for local housebuilding has increased dramatically over the past 6 years, and permission was granted on 240,000 homes in the year to October.
- Building more affordable homes. Nearly 217,000 affordable homes have been delivered since 2010; £19.5 billion public and private funding has already been invested in affordable housebuilding, with plans for a further £38 billion which will help ensure a further 275,000 new affordable homes are provided between 2015 and 2020.
- This means over the next Parliament we will build more new affordable homes than during any equivalent period in the last 20 years.
- Making it easier to convert empty buildings.
- Introducing permitted development rights to allow office space to be converted into new homes without the need for planning permission from the local authority.
- Investing to bring empty homes back into use. Meaning the numbers of empty homes are at a 10-year low.
Mr Lewis also pointed to efforts to tackle the record deficit the government inherited, keeping interest rates low and mortgages more affordable.
It means the numbers of first-time buyers are at a 7 year high, with the Mortgage Advice Bureau recently reporting now as the best time on record to take out a mortgage. -