Tag Archives: housing

Revamped parliamentary group to make recommendations on UK housing

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) is to take a lead role in supporting a new All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Housing and Planning to address the national housing emergency in the UK. The APPG for Housing and Planning, previously chaired by MP Tim Yeo, will now be chaired by James Cartlidge, Conservative MP for South Suffolk, and tasked with recommending wide ranging, innovative solutions to reshape the housing market. It will also look at ways of increasing the housing stock for both rental and private ownership, and speeding up building of sustainable housing in the UK, which now faces an annual shortfall of 130,000 homes. The APPG will consist of MPs from a range of urban and rural constituencies. RICS, which comprises over 90,000 professionals in the UK working across the construction, land and property markets, will support the group as Secretariat. ‘Housing is increasingly becoming one of the most critical policy challenges facing local and national government, and with a Housing Bill pending, it is likely to become more political and controversial,’ said Cartlidge. ‘In this context, a cross party Parliamentary group focused objectively on the national policy challenge of housing offers a vehicle for taking the debate forward in a way that is both positive and constructive,’ he explained. ‘Having spent my working life in the shared ownership housing sector, I am acutely aware of the challenges facing first time buyers, particularly in London. Equally, as a rural MP, I recognise the need for development to be sustainable. Ultimately, there are a whole raft of complex issues in housing and planning today but I hope that our APPG can make a real contribution to the debate,’ he added. RICS chief executive Sean Tompkins pointed out that in the region of 245,000 homes need to be built every year to address the UK's housing crisis. ‘The solutions we need must be innovative and wide ranging, but also grounded within a political framework which allows them to be implemented,’ he said. ‘A coherent housing strategy is also central to many other key issues for the country. For example, a decent roof over your head can enhance your health, academic achievement, job success and social inclusion,’ he added. He also pointed out that the organisation’s Royal Charter and public interest mandate makes it well placed to provide the framework for the constructive debates and broad conversations that must happen across the political spheres in order to develop the solutions. ‘Our expertise, research and market data will all be made available to the Group. The RICS believes there are solutions to be found and we look forward to assisting this new APPG with its valuable agenda,’ Tompkins concluded. Originally formed under the last Parliament, the APPG for Housing and Planning will look to deliver its first set of recommendations later this year. Continue reading

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Over third of UK letting agents report rent rises

Over a third of letting agents in the UK saw rent increases last month, the highest recorded this year, while a third saw an increased in short term let enquiries. Indeed, more and more agents are witnessing increases in the cost of renting, according to the Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA) monthly private rented sector monthly report. Some 36% of agents said that rents had increased between May and June, the highest number since tracking began and 80% predict that private rents will continue to soar over the next five years. ARLA pointed out that member’s views could be the result of the measures introduced to reduce the amount of tax relief buy to let investors can claim in the Chancellor’s Mini Budget last month. The report also found the highest number of agents reporting rent increases was in the East Midlands where 48% said that rents had increased in June, compared to only 17% in Wales. Supply and demand shifted marginally in June, with an average of 178 properties managed per branch, compared to 179 in May. There was an average of 36 prospective tenants registered per ARLA branch in June, the same as the previous three months. The report also revealed that worryingly, supply in London continued to drop with only 118 rental properties managed in June, compared to 134 in May, a decrease of 12%. As the summer holidays begin, interest in short term lets has risen further, with 33% of agents reporting an increase in enquiries for short term lets in June. This has risen by 7% from the previous month when 26% reported an increase in enquiries. Agents in the North West have witnessed the largest increase in enquires for short term lets, with 43% reporting a rise in June. ‘It is worrying to see so many agents reporting an increase in the cost of rent over the last six months, especially considering so many people rent as a way to bridge the gap whilst they save to get onto the property ladder,’ said David Cox, managing director of ARLA. ‘Findings like this continue to prove that the housing crisis isn’t going to disappear anytime soon and it will take a while before we see steps heading in the right direction. The impact of the Chancellor’s reductions to the amount of tax relief buy to let investors can claim will affect the cost of renting over the coming months and is likely to mean it will take even longer to see any improvement in affordability in the private rented sector,’ he added. Continue reading

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More people expected to rent than buy in UK by 2025

By 2025 there may be slightly more people renting privately in the UK than owning with a mortgage, according to new research, with average prices rising to £360,000 by 2020. There will also be a greater number of mostly older people than ever before owning their home outright, amounting to almost 35% of all households, says the analysis from accountants PricewaterhouseCoopers. The analysis also says that UK house price growth is projected by PwC to average just over 5% per annum over the period to 2020. So the average residential property in the UK could be worth around £279,000 in 2015, rising to around £360,000 by 2020. Overall the total UK owner occupation rate is projected to fall from a peak of nearly 70% before the financial crisis to around 60% of households by 2025 and house price growth is projected to moderate to around 5% per annum. The report also points out that as house prices have risen much faster than earnings and social housing supply remains constrained, the number of households in the private rented sector has more than doubled since 2001. This trend is predicted to continue with an additional 1.8 million households becoming private renters by 2025. This would take the total to 7.2 million households, almost one in four of the UK total in 2025. The trend is particularly strong in the 20 to 39 so called generation rent age group where more than half will be renting privately by 2025, according to PwC’s latest UK Economic Outlook report. Also by 2025, PwC analysis finds that there could be slightly more people renting privately than owning with a mortgage. The number of households who own their home with a mortgage fell from around 10 million in 2001 to only around eight million in 2014. This is projected to decline further to just under 7.2 million by 2025 as limited housing supply and mortgage availability make it harder for first time buyers to get on the housing ladder. There will also be record numbers of people owning their own home outright. This accounts now for 8.4 million households and PwC projects this will rise to 10.6 million households by 2025, around 35% of the total. A key driver is the rising proportion of over 60 year olds in the UK, who are far more likely to have paid off their mortgages. ‘Driven by a decade of soaring house prices pre-crisis and lower loan to value ratios post crisis, the deposits needed by first time buyers have risen significantly. As a result, a generation of private renters have emerged and this will increasingly be the norm for the 20 to 39 age group,’ said Richard Snook, senior economist at PwC. ‘There is also a rising dichotomy in the market between those, mostly older, households who own outright and those, mostly younger, households who still have a mortgage or rent to pay,’ he explained. ‘Overall, we project that the proportion of owner occupiers,… Continue reading

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