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Major UK parties but housing at top of election agenda

Housing has become one of the major issues in the UK’s forthcoming general election with all the major parties making pledges to attract voters. The Conservative party said it will extend the Right to Buy scheme and the Liberal Democrats have announced plans to build 300,000 more homes a year and ensure everyone has a decent place to live. The Labour party says it will build at least 200,000 new homes a year by 2020 with first priority for local first time buyers and introduce three year housing tenancies with a ceiling on excessive rent rises. Prime Minister David Cameron said that the £18billion extension of Margaret Thatcher's Right to Buy scheme will be extended to 1.3million families living in housing association properties. It would be funded by requiring councils to sell off the most expensive social housing when it becomes vacant, replacing it on a one to one basis with more affordable property. The existing Right to Buy allows tenants living in council owned properties local authority tenants to buy houses and flats at a discount of as much as 70% up to a maximum of £102,700 in London and £77,000 across the rest of England. Around 500,000 housing association tenants currently have no purchase rights and 800,000 who qualify only for much less generous discounts of £16,000 or less. But the reaction has been mixed. The Conservative plans will not necessarily boost house building and could weaken the future capacity of the social renting sector to provide a safety net for those who cannot afford to house themselves via the private market, according to Peter Williams, executive director of the Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association (IMLA). ‘The risk is that in this manifesto along with others we will get more short term initiatives and that politicians will continue to avoid owning up to the need for a fully formed housing strategy that balances support for people across all forms of housing tenure. Delaying the inevitable will only result in more difficulties in the long term,’ he explained. Adam Challis, head of residential research at JLL, described as good politics, but terrible policy. ‘This is exactly the kind of short termist thinking that the countries' 4.7 million households in social housing don’t need, not to mention the same number again of aspiring owners in private renting,’ he said. ‘Right to Buy benefits a select few while condemning the vast majority to longer waiting lists and fewer choices. At a time when we are building barely half the homes this country needs, we need a government that is interested in genuine solutions to the housing crisis rather than cheap vote winners,’ he added. Colleague Richard Petty, head of affordable housing at JLL, said that extending the Right to Buy to housing associations will seriously damage their ability to help the country build its way out of the housing crisis. ‘They rely on private finance to build now, not government grant. The… Continue reading

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Major UK parties put housing at top of election agenda

Housing has become one of the major issues in the UK’s forthcoming general election with all the major parties making pledges to attract voters. The Conservative party said it will extend the Right to Buy scheme and the Liberal Democrats have announced plans to build 300,000 more homes a year and ensure everyone has a decent place to live. The Labour party says it will build at least 200,000 new homes a year by 2020 with first priority for local first time buyers and introduce three year housing tenancies with a ceiling on excessive rent rises. Prime Minister David Cameron said that the £18billion extension of Margaret Thatcher's Right to Buy scheme will be extended to 1.3million families living in housing association properties. It would be funded by requiring councils to sell off the most expensive social housing when it becomes vacant, replacing it on a one to one basis with more affordable property. The existing Right to Buy allows tenants living in council owned properties local authority tenants to buy houses and flats at a discount of as much as 70% up to a maximum of £102,700 in London and £77,000 across the rest of England. Around 500,000 housing association tenants currently have no purchase rights and 800,000 who qualify only for much less generous discounts of £16,000 or less. But the reaction has been mixed. The Conservative plans will not necessarily boost house building and could weaken the future capacity of the social renting sector to provide a safety net for those who cannot afford to house themselves via the private market, according to Peter Williams, executive director of the Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association (IMLA). ‘The risk is that in this manifesto along with others we will get more short term initiatives and that politicians will continue to avoid owning up to the need for a fully formed housing strategy that balances support for people across all forms of housing tenure. Delaying the inevitable will only result in more difficulties in the long term,’ he explained. Adam Challis, head of residential research at JLL, described as good politics, but terrible policy. ‘This is exactly the kind of short termist thinking that the countries' 4.7 million households in social housing don’t need, not to mention the same number again of aspiring owners in private renting,’ he said. ‘Right to Buy benefits a select few while condemning the vast majority to longer waiting lists and fewer choices. At a time when we are building barely half the homes this country needs, we need a government that is interested in genuine solutions to the housing crisis rather than cheap vote winners,’ he added. Colleague Richard Petty, head of affordable housing at JLL, said that extending the Right to Buy to housing associations will seriously damage their ability to help the country build its way out of the housing crisis. ‘They rely on private finance to build now, not government grant. The… Continue reading

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Housing lending falls overall in Australia but up slightly for new homes

The number of loans to owner occupiers, excluding refinancing, declined modestly in February in Australia, according to the latest figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. However, the number of loans to those purchasing and building new homes increased by 2% which the Housing Industry Association, the voice of the residential building industry, said is encouraging. ‘This is a relatively positive result against a backdrop where lending to households purchasing existing homes eased back modestly,’ said Geordan Murray, HIA economist. Overall the number of loans to owner occupiers buying established homes, excluding refinancing, fell by 0.9% in February to a level 4.9% weaker compared with the same time a year ago. ‘Lending figures indicate that the investor market eased by around 3.4% during February, but remained around 9.9% higher than the same period a year ago. The majority of the growth in investor lending has been to those purchasing existing homes. In February over 90% of lending to investors went into the existing home market,’ explained Murray. He pointed out that lending activity in the first home buyer market remained quite weak. The number of loans to first home buyers in the three months to February 2015 was around 8.2% lower than the corresponding period a year earlier,’ he added. A breakdown of the figures shows that the total number of owner occupier loans for new housing in February 2015 compared with February 2014 shows that only Victoria and Tasmania recorded growth at 3.2% and 71.7% respectively. Elsewhere, there were declines with a fall of 0.4% in New South Wales, Queensland down 1.7%, South Australia down 17.4% and Western Australia down 12.8%. Continue reading

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