British PM pledges 200,000 starter homes in next five years

Taylor Scott International News

British Prime Minister David Cameron has called for a national crusade to get homes built and promised to change planning rules to boost the number of affordable properties such as starter homes for first time buyers In a speech he said that there will be an overhaul of Whitehall and town hall planning rules which prevent house builders from offering low cost, affordable home ownership. Starter Homes will be sold at a 20% discount to first time buyers under the age of 40 and 200,000 will be delivered by 2020. ‘We need a national crusade to get homes built. That means banks lending, government releasing land, and planning being reformed,’ Cameron said, adding it will be part of a dramatic shift in housing policy. One of the problems, he claimed, has been that until now affordable homes have been for people to rent, not own and developers have been tied by rules regarding what kind of affordable homes can be built. ‘Those old rules which said to developers: you can build on this site, but only if you build affordable homes for rent, we're replacing them with new rules. You can build here and those affordable homes can be available to buy. Yes, from generation rent to generation buy,’ Cameron added. However, the British Property Federation (BPF) has urged the Government to focus on delivery of all housing tenures, not just homes to buy. The organisation has warned that, although initiatives to create more homes for sale are welcome, high house prices and the growing number of private renters in the UK means that more must be done to encourage the purpose built rental sector which it said has £30 billion ready to invest and the potential to deliver a significant number of new homes. ‘Politicians talk about Generation Rent as if it is something to be ashamed of, when this should not be the case. Countries such as Germany and the United States have thriving rental markets, where people happily live in institutionally backed, purpose built, high quality rented accommodation for many years,’ said Melanie Leech, chief executive of the British Property Federation. ‘While we are not against owner occupation, and see Starter Homes as a welcome initiative, we are aware that such a policy is stoking demand for home ownership, rather than focusing on meeting supply. Build to rent has enormous potential to deliver additional homes to the UK, and government must not overlook this in blind pursuit of making us a nation of home owners,’ she added. According to Mark Hayward, managing director of the National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA) 200,000 new homes is not enough. ‘We first heard this pledge in Cameron’s pre-election campaign, and we still support the sentiment. However, other initiatives such as the Help to Buy scheme still remains in place and it boils down to the fact that we are still waiting to see new homes being built; and whilst we wait capacity remains… Taylor Scott International

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