When the Tories were elected in 2015, Mr. Cameron vowed
to build 1,000,000 new homes by 2020. If
we as a Country hit those levels of building, most academics stated the UK
Housing market would balance itself as the increased supply of property would
give a chance for the younger generation to buy their own home as opposed to rent. However, the up-to-date building figures show
that in the first three months of 2016 building starts were down. Nationally, there were 35,530 house building starts in the
first quarter, a long way off the 50,000 a quarter required to hit those
ambitious, some would say unrealistic, targets.
Looking
closer to home, over the last 12 months, new building in the Aylesbury Vale
District Council area has dropped. In
2014/15, for every one thousand existing households in the area, an additional 15.53
homes were built. For 2015/16, that
figure is now only 14.78 homes built per thousand existing households. Nationally, to meet that 1,000,000 new homes
target, we need to be at 7.12 new homes per thousand,
which means Aylesbury Vale District Council is actually above the National
target, the problem is the country is only building at a rate of 4.9 for every
thousand exiting households – we can’t just rely on little old Aylesbury to
build for the rest of the Country.
To put
those numbers into real chimney pots, over the last 12 months, in the Aylesbury
Vale District Council area,
·
940 Private Builders (e.g. New Homes Builders)
·
150 Housing Association
·
Nil Local Authority
Cameron and
Osborne focused their attention too much on the demand side of the housing
equation, using the Help to Buy scheme and low deposit mortgages to convert the
‘Generation Rent’ i.e. Aylesbury ‘20 somethings’ who are set to rent for the
rest of their lives to ‘Generation Buy’. On the other side of the coin the new Housing
Minster, Gavin Barwell, should concentrate the Government’s efforts on the
supply side of the equation. There needs
to be transformations to planning laws, massive scale releases of public land
and more investment, as more inventive solutions are needed.
Whilst our new PM has many plates to spin,
evading the housing crisis will only come at greater cost later on. What a legacy it would be if it was Mrs. May
who finally got to grips with the persistent and enduring shortage of homes to
live in. The PM has already referenced
the ‘need to do far more to get more houses built’ and stop the decline of home
ownership. However, she has also ruled
out any changes to the green belt policy.
Her announcements on proposed changes to the school system show she is not afraid to confront issues...interesting times ahead!
Nala in good form, sunny walks. |
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