In a report published today, Wednesday 10 December 2020 the
Public Accounts Committee condemns as “deplorable” the “cycle of
policy invention, abandonment and reinvention, stringing
expectant young people along for years”, “wasting time and
resources” on housing policies that “come to nothing as ministers
come and go with alarming frequency” .
The Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government
(MHCLG) has failed to deliver the 200,000 discounted Starter
Homes it promised first-time buyers in 2015. Despite setting out
the legislative framework for Starter Homes in 2016, the
Department has never put in place the necessary laws to make the
affordable homes initiative a reality.
The PAC has reported regularly on housing delivery since 2015,
and not one of the promised housing programmes has delivered its
objectives. By 2017, Starter Homes as a distinct policy had been
abandoned, although it was not until 2020 that the Department
formally announced the end of the policy. Some 85,000 people had
registered their interest in Starter Homes since 2015, only to
hear in 2020 that they had been waiting in vain.
MHCLG is now introducing a new policy with similar aims – First
Homes – but is unable to say when they will be available for
first-time buyers to purchase. Its reliance on developer
contributions to fund First Homes is part of an opaque, complex
mechanism which risks less money being available to local
authorities for housing and infrastructure.
After this string of abandoned policies and wasted resources,
MHCLG remains unable or unwilling to clarify how it will achieve
its ambition of 300,000 new homes per year by the mid-2020s.
There is an alarming “blurring” of the definition of affordable
housing: it is essential that the Department is clear what
‘affordable’ means to different sectors of society and in
different areas of the country. The long-term success of MHCLG’s
housing policies depends on it working effectively with players
across the housing sector, without losing sight of the needs of
those who are unlikely to be able to buy or rent a home in the UK
property market without support.
, Chair of the Public Accounts Committee,
said: “The Department for ‘Housing’ is at risk of losing
the right to the title. It has serially, constantly failed to
deliver affordable new homes or even make a serious attempt to
execute its own housing policies or achieve targets before they
are ditched, unannounced - costs sunk and outcomes unknown.
“MHCLG needs to ditch instead the false promises and set out
clear, staged, funded plans, backed by the necessary laws and
with a realistic prospect of delivering.
“It also needs to ditch what is becoming a hallmark lack of
transparency, if it is to have any hope of rebuilding confidence
among future tenants and owners that the decent, safe, affordable
homes they want and need will ever be built.”
PAC report conclusions and recommendations
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We deplore the time and resources wasted by the
Department as it let the Starter Homes policy drift out of
existence. The Department deprioritised the Starter
Homes policy in 2017 when the Housing White Paper Fixing
our broken housing market indicated a shift in housing
policy in favour of a wider variety of ways of helping people
into home ownership. However, it was not until January 2020 –
three years later - before the Department publicly admitted
that Starter Homes had been abandoned altogether. It took the
Department far too long to inform both Parliament and those who
had registered their interest in Starter Homes that the policy
had been dropped. It was not until 2020 that the 85,000 people
who had registered their interest with the Home Builders
Federation were told that Starter Homes were no longer
available and advised on alternative housing options. The
Department spent approximately £173 million on brownfield land
preparing for the building of Starter Homes, net of receipts
from onward sale of land to developers. Homes England forecasts
that around 6,600 homes will be built on the sites prepared
using funding intended for Starter Homes, but only 36% of these
homes will meet the current definition of affordable housing.
Recommendation: The Department should be open with
Parliament and the public when policies change or are abandoned.
Such announcements should be made to Parliament and the public in
a timely manner to reduce uncertainty and disappointment for
those looking to the government to help them; in this case, to
find a home they can afford.
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The Department’s reliance on developer contributions to
fund First Homes is a complex mechanism lacking transparency
and risks less money being available to local authorities for
housing and infrastructure. First Homes differ from
Starter Homes as they will be sold at a higher discount, only
to local first-time buyers, and with a discount that will be
passed on to future buyers when First Homes are resold. First
Homes will also be delivered through the existing planning
system so are not dependent on new legislation. The discount
will be funded through developer contributions. Local
authorities will be expected to ensure 25% of affordable homes
built by developers contribute to the First Homes initiative.
We have previously criticised the system of developer
contributions for its complexity, and lack of transparency over
how much developers actually contribute. The Department does
not have a timetable or target for delivering First Homes but
is planning a pilot to build 1,500 First Homes ‘within the next
couple of years’, which it wants to learn from before further
planning of the new scheme. However, the Department could not
say when First Homes would become more widely available and
blamed its lack of clear timetable or targets on the
uncertainty of the housing market.
Recommendation: As part of the First Homes pilot, the
Department should model the effect of funding First Homes from
developer contributions on local authorities’ ability to fund
local infrastructure and other housing needs, such as social
housing, and what the opportunity cost is of using developer
contributions in this way. It should also set out clearly how the
secondary resale market will work.
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We are disappointed that the Department remains unable
or unwilling to clarify how it will achieve its ambition of
300,000 new homes per year by the mid-2020s. We are
wearily familiar with the Department’s lack of clarity over how
it intends to meet its ambition – not target – of 300,000 new
homes per year by the mid-2020s. The Department asserts that
the ambition is ‘incredibly challenging’, made more so by the
current uncertain housing market conditions. It claims that
this makes it impossible to be transparent over the path to
meet this ambition as it is in part dependent on how developers
respond to market conditions. The Department has plans to
increase the range and variety of new homes that are built,
speed up building, and encourage more small and medium-sized
developers to build homes and encourage developers to build out
sites and not land bank. However, if the Department does not
set targets and map the path to meeting its ambition for
300,000 new homes a year, it cannot measure progress or assess
value for money across its array of housing policies.
Recommendation: We are frustrated that once again we must
repeat our recommendation that the Department should clarify how
its range of housing schemes, including First Homes, will each
contribute to its ambition of building 300,000 new homes per year
by the mid-2020s.
It should write to us within three months, including an
assessment of how many homes of each tenure it expects will be
delivered and what types of homes count towards its 300,000
ambition.
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We welcome Homes England’s commitment to provide us
with regular updates on its progress delivering affordable
housing, but we are concerned that it and the Department has
yet to clarify what ‘affordable’ actually means, and how much
it costs to deliver affordable housing. The Department
claims that ‘affordable’ means different things in different
settings: different regions have differing requirements for
housing that is affordable, and it varies in meaning across
different housing programmes. Homes England uses the formal
definition as set out in the 2018 version of the National
Planning Policy Framework: broadly, ‘affordable’ means homes
for rent, sale or shared ownership at less than market rates.
The number and proportion of affordable homes planned for the
sites intended for Starter Homes has increased from 1,700 (29%)
to 2,370 (36%), reflecting an increased focus on affordable
housing. However, we are concerned that the cost per affordable
home of those funded by money intended for Starter Homes
appears much greater than the cost per affordable home
delivered by local authorities. The assessment of value derived
from the funding intended for Starter Homes should encompass
those homes delivered for market, and it should recognise that
homes are being built on land that would otherwise be underused
and not viable without government help, therefore will be more
expensive than other types of affordable home.
Recommendation: The Department should write to us within
one month setting out a clear definition of ‘affordable housing’,
whether this definition means they are for sale, shared ownership
or rent, and whether, and how, the definition may vary for
different circumstances and geographies.
As agreed, Homes England should write to us every 6 months to
update us on the numbers of affordable homes created, and of what
type and tenure.
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The long-term success of the Department’s housing
policies depends on it being able to engage effectively with
organisations across the housing sector and provide clarity on
funding, without losing sight of the needs of those who are
unlikely to be able to buy or rent their own home without
support. Success in delivering housing relies on close
working with local authorities, good relationships with
developers, and maximising value for money from the public
subsidy of housing. Starter Homes and First Homes are, however,
aimed at people who want to buy and have incomes that allow
them to do so - they do not help people move out of temporary
accommodation, which requires more social housing. The
Department’s view is that diversity of housing supply is key to
building out sites and increasing rates of take up of new
housing. The £12.2 billion Affordable Homes Programme contains
other types of new housing supply to meet a variety of needs.
The Department counts student accommodation and converted
offices as new housing, as they relieve pressure on housing
more widely. To address the housing needs of the homeless and
those in temporary accommodation, Homes England is trying to
encourage the building of smaller, cheaper homes through
investing in modular homes, encouraging sites with high levels
of modular construction, and encouraging demand for this type
of home given the doubts of some local planning authorities.
Recommendation: The Department should write to us within
three months to explain how it is addressing the problems of
homelessness, rough sleeping, and families in temporary
accommodation.
It should increase its efforts to work more closely with local
authorities and developers, make greater use of innovative
methods such as modular forms of housing, and embed space and
light standards in legislation to ensure housing is of decent
quality.