Housing deployment and delivery
Housing delivery has been underwhelming, with an average of just under 180,000 homes per annum achieved over the last 14 years, compared with a target of 300,000 homes. A key challenge for the next government will be to raise the rate of delivery - not only of new build homes for sale but also new build for rent.
Labour
- A target of 1.5 million homes built within the first five years (in line with the current target). While this target is lower than the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives have proposed (see below), the Labour target will be mandatory.
- A brownfield first approach, but acknowledging that brownfield development alone will not be sufficient to achieve housebuilding targets.
- A commitment to preserving the Green Belt, but taking a more strategic approach to Green Belt land designation and release in order to build more homes in the right places. Prioritising building on ‘grey belt’ land but with a clear pathway to how this can be achieved with local communities and authorities on board.
- Develop new towns alongside urban extensions and regeneration projects.
- Update the National Policy Planning Framework within the first 100 days of Government by ensuring authorities have up to date Local Plans. Provide 300 additional planning officers across all local authorities (an average of less than one per local authority), funded through increasing the rate of the stamp duty surcharge paid by non-UK residents.
- Introduce new mechanisms for cross-boundary strategic planning, with all Combined and Mayoral Authorities to strategically plan for housing growth in their areas using new planning powers.
- Further reform of compulsory purchase compensation rules to improve land assembly and infrastructure delivery and “ensure that for specific types of development schemes, landowners are awarded fair compensation rather than inflated prices based on the prospect of planning permission.”
- Abolish the legacy EU ‘nutrient neutrality’ rules
- Prioritise the building of new social rented homes and better protect existing stock by reviewing the increased right to buy discounts introduced in 2012 and increasing protections on newly built social housing.
Liberal Democrats
- A mandatory target of 380,000 homes per annum, of which 150,000 would be social housing. This is over 25% higher than the current Government target and is to be achieved by delivering 10 new garden villages. However, there is no detail on where these will be located or how they will implement delivery and require local councils to meet their housing targets.
- Invest in skills in the construction sector through new technology.
- Encourage development of existing brownfield sites through financial incentives.
- Expand Neighbourhood Planning across England and allow local authorities to set their own planning fees to improve planning outcomes in high flood risk areas.
Conservative
- Deliver 1.6 million homes in the next Parliament, or 320,000 homes each year. This is slightly ahead of the current target of 300,000, and a substantial 60% increase on the target set in the previous manifesto. It is also nearly 80% higher than delivery rates over the last 14 years.
- ‘Fast-tracking’ new homes through the planning system on brownfield land in urban areas in the UK’s 20 largest cities. No detail is provided on what this means in practise.
- Raise density levels in inner London to those of European cities like Paris and Barcelona.
- No change on the current Green Belt policy, which commits to protecting it from uncontrolled development, while ensuring more homes get built where it makes sense, such as inner cities. There will be no requirement to remove land from the Green Belt for development, despite a pressing need to deliver some new housing in these areas, often ones with the most acute affordable housing shortages.
The Carter Jonas view on housing delivery
Greater housing delivery can only be achieved by helping to unlock and unblock the currently cumbersome, complex, and expensive planning system. Housing targets need to be backed up by well thought out plans on how to actually achieve these figures. For example, the number of construction contractors and workers that would be needed to build 300,000+ homes needs to be addressed.
Taken together with other measures to try and ensure there is proper cross-boundary strategic planning, we believe Labour’s proposal offers hope for an uptick in new homes being built. Both Labour and the Liberal Democrats are proposing new settlements as part of the solution. However, all the evidence is that these are difficult to bring forward and will take decades to deliver, relying on local authority and local community buy-in, with benefits offered to local authorities when they accept new housing. This has not been overwhelmingly successful under the current government with CIL and the new homes bonus used as current incentives. In any event, there are not enough planners or practitioners with the necessary experience to deliver these projects. What’s more, the water, power, drainage, and transport needed to deliver these large-scale developments would need to be heavily publicly subsidised, which is unlikely to be affordable at the scale needed or in a sensible timescale in some areas.
Labour has maintained its position on some form of land value capture, which is consistent with pronouncements made over the last 18 months, but it should be remembered that once a range of existing contributions are taken into account, a significant amount of landowner value is already dissipated, and there will be a limit as to what can be secured before compensation becomes ‘unfair’. The Liberal Democrat proposal to allow councils to buy land at existing land value (presumably with compulsory purchase powers) will be extremely controversial with landowners, and one can expect protracted legal disputes.