Housing (Built Environment Committee Report) Motion to Take Note
Moved by Lord Moylan That this House takes note of the report from
the Built Environment Committee Meeting Housing Demand (1st Report,
Session 2021–22, HL Paper 132). Lord Moylan (Con) My Lords, I begin
by drawing the House’s attention to my registered interest as a
member of the board of the Ebbsfleet Development Corporation. In
moving this Motion, I pay tribute to my noble friend...Request free trial
Housing (Built
Environment Committee Report)
Motion to Take Note
Moved by
That this House takes note of the report from the Built
Environment Committee Meeting Housing Demand (1st Report, Session
2021–22, HL Paper 132).
(Con)
My Lords, I begin by drawing the House’s attention to my
registered interest as a member of the board of the Ebbsfleet
Development Corporation. In moving this Motion, I pay tribute to
my noble friend Lady Neville-Rolfe, who chaired the committee
from its inception and during the period when it was producing
this report. It was published as long ago as January this year,
although it seems much fresher than that. I think I speak on
behalf of all members of the committee in thanking her for her
work and the way in which she welded us together as an
irresistible inquisitive force trying to understand the workings
of the various aspects of society that come within our
purlieu.
In producing this report, we started from some common ground, the
first element of which is that there are too few homes for the
population in this country. There are too few homes for those who
want them, but also not all the homes are necessarily the right
homes to meet demand in terms of size, necessary amenities and so
forth; nor are they all in the right place. I think we all
started with the common view that building more homes was at
least a very important part of the solution to that problem.
The Government have set themselves a target of seeing 300,000
homes built per annum. It is sometimes said that the Government
have promised to build 300,000 homes, but they do not build
homes, or not in any significant number; the homes are to be
built by the private sector. That figure is obviously an
approximation and is what would I describe as a stretch target.
There is nothing wrong with setting yourself a stretch target as
a tool for motivating effort, provided, of course, it is
understood as such. In the current year, the industry expects to
be on track to build approximately 240,000 new homes. Although
that figure is less than 300,000, it is none the less not to be
regarded in any way as a failure.
With that common background, our report focused on the barriers
to increasing the number of homes being delivered per annum and
bringing it closer to that 300,000 figure. As it is such a long
report, in the interests of time, I shall inevitably be selective
about the items that I draw to the House’s attention, hoping that
the other members of the committee I see in the Chamber will
alight on other issues.
I intend to focus on three issues. One is the house- builders
themselves, though in what I am about to say I do not intend any
criticism of them at all. The large housebuilders—the ones that
do the volumes we need—are relatively few in number. They do not
have the capacity, either financial or in personnel, to ramp up
the number of houses they are building every year on the scale
that the Government would necessarily hope for.
There are difficulties in becoming a large housebuilder; it is an
industry that has barriers to entry. One needs the land, the
resources and—I will come to this in a moment—the skills
necessary to negotiate the planning system in order to get the
permissions that allow one to build large developments. One of
our recommendations was that everything should be done to
encourage more small housebuilders, to help take up the slack. We
noted that the number of small housebuilders over the last two
decades had declined and the share of the new-build market they
were responsible for was probably at its lowest level for a very
long time. One thing we want to see is more encouragement for
smaller housebuilders, partly to add to the diversity of the
housing stock available to members of the public looking for a
new home, but also in the hope that some of the small
housebuilders might, over time or even quite rapidly, become
large housebuilders so that they are able to offer some
competition and spur to the existing large housebuilders.
That brings us to planning. I have already mentioned the expense
and complexity of obtaining planning permission. Certainly, when
it comes to the smaller housebuilders, one has to take into
account the fact that a substantial amount of money must be put
up in advance, at risk, as one seeks planning permission. Leaving
aside the cost of the land itself, which one could take an option
on, the fact is that the design, the architectural work, the
necessary studies, the environmental impact assessments and so
forth, together with the planning fees, represent a significant
upfront investment, which may never be recovered if it turns out
that the application is simply doomed to fail. That is a
significant deterrent and part of the barriers to entry that I
mentioned, which prevent smaller house- builders offering more
competition to the large ones. Overall, however, even in relation
to large housebuilders, the committee found that delays in the
planning system and uncertainty over planning reform had a
chilling effect on housebuilding.
We also found that in a plan-led system for development, such as
we have had in this country since the end of the Second World War
through the Town and Country Planning Act, the system does not
work—or does not work well—unless local plans are in place that
are up to date and relevant to the needs of the local area and
the forecast demand for homes. We also found that local plans
need to be simpler, clearer and more transparent. In that regard,
we look forward—as we have done for some time—to scrutinising the
Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill, and hope to see reform of
local plan-making in that Bill.
In relation to planning, we were also particularly concerned
about the Government’s wish to move further away from Section 106
payments in the direction of an infrastructure levy. We
appreciate that if an infrastructure levy can be a simpler method
of calculating the contribution expected from a developer than
Section 106, that is an attraction. Our concern is not that but
that Section 106 contributions must, by law, be relevant to the
development taking place. Therefore, if money is paid to
contribute to or provide a primary school for a large new
development, the contribution is tied to that primary school and
one can be reasonably confident that it will be delivered. Our
understanding of the infrastructure levy, however, is that the
local authority can simply take the money and it becomes part of
its general funds, so the connection with the development, and
therefore with providing the amenities necessary to support it,
is lost. We would therefore like to see some sort of assurance in
that respect.
We also noted that planning departments in local authorities up
and down the country lack sufficient skills to process the
applications coming to them and to assess the increasingly
complicated factors loaded on to planning applications. If we are
to have a plan-led system and the Government are to insist on a
certain level of complexity, it is incumbent on them to ensure
that there are sufficient planning officers with the right skills
to process them so that development can take place.
In relation to housebuilding, it is worth moving on to skills in
the construction sector as well, the point on which I shall
conclude. It is fair to say that the skilled trades necessary for
the traditional method of house- building have been in decline
for quite a long time—well over a decade, possibly longer. That
is why, long before Brexit, the phrase “the Polish plumber” had
become almost standard in our language. By encouraging
immigration in those skilled trades, we had been responding to a
long-standing decline in local availability of those skills. That
was long before Brexit. The lack of plumbers, carpenters and so
forth has not been produced by Brexit; it was already there.
Brexit has changed the arrangements in the use of immigration to
make up the shortfall.
In this respect, it has to be asked whether constantly importing
skilled trades from the European Union was a sustainable and
feasible response over the long term to the problem, anyway,
especially given that many of the countries from which they were
coming were themselves becoming richer and had demand for that
labour at home.
We therefore think it behoves the industry to consider new
methods of building alongside traditional methods—and perhaps
taking their place—including automation, innovation and modular
housing. It struck us that modular housing has been promised for
many years but has never quite taken off. The Government should
be looking closely at that and trying to understand why the many
words that have been spoken about it have not turned into the
revolution in housebuilding we might have expected.
Many hands have gone into the making of this report. I am
grateful to all the members of the committee who attended so many
evidence sessions, undertook visits and made such a great
contribution. I have already mentioned my noble friend Lady
Neville-Rolfe. I should express thanks to our special adviser,
who looked after us throughout, Professor Paul Cheshire, Emeritus
Professor of Economic Geography at the LSE. I thank all the
clerks and the other House staff who supported us in producing
the report. I will probably break some terrible taboo in your
Lordships’ House by mentioning our lead clerk by name, Dee
Goddard, and giving her a special vote of thanks, because she has
looked after the committee since its inception and is leaving the
service of the House in a couple of weeks’ time to relocate with
her family to another part of the country. I give a special word
of thanks to her as I sit down and commend this report to your
Lordships’ House
5.48pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I thank the noble Lord, , for introducing this report.
A bit to my surprise, I found myself agreeing with virtually
everything he said. I mainly thank the committee for its hard
work in this important area. Given the nature of an all-party
report, it is excellent, covering the whole territory. There is
much to learn.
I will focus on one part of the report, which simply states:
“There is a serious shortage of social housing”.
I want to make one straightforward point on the importance of
council housing. We face some public policy problems to which
there is no obvious solution, but we have other problems to which
we do know the solution. History tells us what the solution is
but, for some reason, we avoid the obvious. We know from history
that the way to obtain a bigger supply of social housing is to
build council houses.
I could quote the experience of the 1964 Labour Government—there
is justification for that—but I am going to look at the 1951
Conservative Government. I have been rereading Harold Macmillan’s
autobiography. There is much to learn. As I read, I had to ask
myself whether he would have a place in today’s Conservative
Party. I think the answer is no, but I do not know; obviously, he
was a man of many parts. He was the Minister for Housing from
1951. He inherited a decision of the Conservative Party
conference that it wanted to build 300,000 houses a year—an
interesting figure. Of course, it is worth stressing that this
was new-build and at the same time, it was having to undertake a
massive restoration of the housing stock, which had been
destroyed or run down during the war.
Macmillan set about achieving that objective. In 1953, there was
a White Paper, Houses: The Next Step. I will quote for noble
Lords the biography of Harold Macmillan by Charles Williams,
which says that, after the White Paper, Macmillan realised that
he would
“have to persuade his own colleagues that the only way to meet
the promise given to the electorate”—
the manifesto promise—
“was to engage in a sustained programme of local authority
housing.”
He goes on to explain that
“the only way to achieve the housing target was by subsidising
local authorities to build for rent. In other words, council
housing was to have the top priority.”
By way of background, during the subsequent debate in the
Commons, Macmillan gave a routine acceptance of a property-owning
democracy. His whole argument was that, as a long-term aim,
property ownership was fine. However, Williams states:
“Council housing for rent was the only way to meet the political
objective he had been set—and which he was determined to
achieve.”
We have the same target now and the same means of achieving it;
that is the true meaning of the shift.
Many years ago, when I was a member of a local authority, people
said, “We shouldn’t be subsidising bricks. We should be
subsidising people”. That is clearly wrong. The only way to solve
a housing shortage is to build houses, and the most direct and
simple way to achieve that is through a massive council housing
programme.
5.53pm
(LD)
My Lords, I thank the noble Lord, , for his introduction. I am
pleased to be a member of the Built Environment Committee. I
found this brief challenging and I too thank our committee
officers and special adviser, Professor Paul Cheshire, who helped
us to see the wood for the trees —or, in my case, at least to try
to. Our title is Meeting Housing Demand, which is a wide field.
The breadth and level of expertise of our witnesses was
phenomenal. I felt privileged to listen to many of them.
In my contribution on this wide-ranging report, I propose to
focus on the planning system and the role of councils, and
perhaps to be a little challenging to us as politicians. It goes
without saying that, as a member, I agreed with most the
recommendations, subject to the usual wrangling in coming to
consensus.
The report focuses on how to build the now-accepted target of
300,000 homes a year. Actually, even that target was disputed.
What was not disputed was that the Government are failing to
reach it. In all fairness, so have decades of politicians; this
is a long-term issue.
However, all the major parties agree that we need more homes.
They broadly agree on the numbers and we even all mention this in
our manifestos and general political rhetoric, but I have two
points on this fact alone. First, it is all empty bravado and
meaningless if the underlying problems in the system are not
addressed. The report, with which we largely concur,
uncomfortably highlights many of these for the Government.
Secondly, this is completely at odds with the subsequent rhetoric
and actions of individual politicians of all parties when it
comes to development in their own constituencies or wards. We
have seen a nation of nimbys go BANANAs—build absolutely nothing
anywhere near anybody. This is a serious issue and it needs
serious attention. Taking the public with us is critical to
success, and we need a radical, innovative approach to
engagement. I hope the Minister shares the plans for this with
us.
Following a range of comments made by senior politicians
recently, there seems to have been backtracking on targets and
housing numbers. I would welcome the Minister clarifying whether
targets and top-down housing numbers allocated to local councils
are to be continued under this new Government. In particular, how
effective or not do the Government believe they have been in
getting more homes built?
As for housing numbers, what progress have the Government made on
deciding what the right honourable MP said, on returning to the
Cabinet, is a
“fair way of allocating housing need”?
I am sure every politician in the land is eager to learn what
constitutes a fair allocation in their council area.
This kind of statement epitomises one of my main concerns: it
sounds plausible and sensible, along with other soundbites, such
as “simplify the planning system”, “cut red tape” and “the right
homes in the right places”, but what do they actually mean? We
heard lots of those in our evidence, but they clearly mean
different things to different interest groups.
Take the simple statement that is often repeated of delays in the
planning system or that councils are to blame for reduced
completions. For the housebuilders, this gets the politicians,
and therefore the community, out of the picture. It means
minimising housebuilders’ involvement, reducing their fees and
levies, and simplifying policies so that expectations are known
up front, riding roughshod over local consideration. This was
more clearly and very recently expressed in the Home Builders
Federation’s report Building Homes in a Changing Business
Environment. Some noble Lords were sent that report, and more
could and should be said on it, but time prohibits it.
I turn now to council planners, whose version is probably closer
to that of the Government: to please stop developers trying to
get out of their commitments to Section 106 and infrastructure
levies, particularly around social housing; to give them stronger
powers to insist on higher environmental building standards so
that they do not spend ages haggling with developers; and to stop
trying to water down their local policies, designed with and for
their communities, in efforts to make it all simpler—for the
developers.
I do not doubt that some councils are not performing at their
best. How do we bring the worst closer to the best, and how do we
empower council officers to stand up to developers which refuse
to follow our best practice? Can the Minister tell us whether the
Government will in fact be bringing forward plans to reform the
planning system? In particular, what changes will there be to
ensure that the skills and recruitment issues within councils
outlined in the report are fully addressed?
We heard that qualified planners can earn significantly more
money working for developers than for councils, which, especially
small district councils, cannot compete with those salaries.
Within the reforms, will the Government grasp the nettle of real
community engagement, make the case for the national need for
more homes, and be prepared to challenge not just
councils—because, hey, they are a faceless piece of bureaucracy
that the Government can tell what to do, and the Government bear
down on them through such mechanisms as the housing delivery
test—but council leaders and MPs who use that slogan, “the right
homes in the right places”, and try to ride the tide of anger
from their residents while, in some cases, actually voting for
the policies that are prompting the rise in unpopular
developments?
How will the Government face the challenge that local communities
have virtually no incentive to permit residential development
while saying that they will have a major say in local plans in
the future, giving them opportunity to shape what happens in
their area? Once again, the soundbite is good, but what does it
mean in reality? How will it be different from what many good
councils have been trying to do all along? How will it get
communities to accept development? Are the Government still
supportive of neighbourhood plans, for example, which seemed to
work in some places in this regard?
Many residents’ objections are about the strain on local
services, and this is well documented in the report. What are the
latest plans on CIL—the community infrastructure levy—and Section
106 contributions, and, in particular, the recent proposals that
such fees should be paid by the developer not only when the
development is completed but the homes occupied? Is that still
going ahead? Who will therefore be responsible for funding the
infrastructure while it is being built? Will it be cash-strapped
councils?
What do the Government intend to do with the 61% of councils
without a local plan? They would argue that the Government should
please stop changing the goalposts and let them get the plans
finished—but, then, guess what? The goalposts change. Depending
on the Minister’s answer, they will probably have to change
again. In which case, will the current plans still be valid, and
until when?
Finally, many witnesses spoke of uncertainty within planning
permission—all the chopping and changing, and playing the blame
game. I hate that we pit developers against councils, and
councils against their communities, because this will not get
community buy-in for 300,000 homes a year. This is only one
aspect of the many highlighted in the report. However, I purport
that, without it, it will make it politically difficult to
deliver those essential 300,000 homes, and we will continue to
fail to meet our critical housing needs.
6.03pm
The Lord
My Lords, I begin by commending the report and thank the noble
Lord, , for introducing this debate.
I also commend the work of my right reverend friend the , who, as the Church
of England’s lead bishop for housing, has tirelessly engaged with
this issue and the Social Housing (Regulation) Bill.
Last year, the Archbishops’ Commission on Housing, Church and
Community published its Coming Home report, which set out a
vision for housing to be sustainable, safe, stable, sociable and
satisfying. It is through these values that strong and lasting
communities can be built, enabling people to thrive and flourish.
It was very interesting to note how warmly these five values were
welcomed by the industry itself as a guide.
However, the reality is that a large proportion of housing in
this country does not embody these values. It is widely stated
that we face a housing crisis, including a shortage of social
housing. Social housing is designed to help those whose needs are
not served by the market, most commonly those on the lowest
incomes. However, when Meeting Housing Demand was published, 1.9
million households were on local authority waiting lists for
social housing in England. With rents and interest rates rapidly
rising, more households are being pushed into poverty and this
list is only growing longer.
This social housing shortage is forcing huge numbers of
lower-income households into the private rental sector, while
others are placed in temporary accommodation. I recognise that,
for some, temporary housing is a valuable lifeline, but it cannot
become the long-term solution. In 2021, 124,290 children were
living in temporary accommodation. The Archbishops’ Commission
revealed that some families had been living in temporary
accommodation for over a decade, during which time they had been
moved around multiple times. In London, 37% of those in temporary
accommodation are placed outside the resident’s home borough and,
in some cases, moved to other parts of the country. This means
that they are moved away from family, friends, schools, jobs and
communities. This is no way for a child to grow up and it is why
we need much more social housing.
Furthermore, the crisis is being exacerbated by a lack of
genuinely affordable housing. Affordable rents are set at about
80% of the market rate, but in many areas this is not affordable
for those on low incomes, so it pushes more households into
poor-quality private rented sector housing. Do the Government
have any plans to change the percentage of the market price at
which housing is deemed affordable, or instead to define
affordability in relation to household incomes?
To mitigate this crisis in the long run, it is crucial that more
social and affordable housing is provided. Over the past 40
years, there has been a halving of the social rental sector. The
Government’s target is ambitious at 300,000 new homes per year
and 1 million new homes by 2024, but they have not outlined what
housing types and tenures these will be. What percentage of these
targets will be genuinely affordable social housing? A more
detailed plan is required, outlining targets for the proportion
of these homes that will be affordable.
As the Meeting Housing Demand report reveals, many tenants who
previously would have been in social housing are now privately
renting expensive accommodation, with their rents subsidised
through housing benefit. This is costing the Government £23.4
billion per year. Providing more social housing is a matter not
only of helping some of the most vulnerable in our society but of
financial common sense.
I highlight the work of the local authorities in my region of the
north-east, as they strategise and begin to build new social
housing. In particular, I highlight Sunderland City Council,
which is collaborating with Sunderland College and the Ministry
of Building Innovation and Education to develop a housing
innovation and construction skills academy, which will educate,
train, and upskill local people, who will then be able to build
local homes. I commend these local authorities as they work to
build new social housing and reduce the skills shortage at the
same time, but there must be a more detailed commitment on a
national level. I ask the Minister: how widely are the Government
encouraging councils, colleges and industries to work
collaboratively on upskilling people in the housing industry?
Here, in line with the point made by the noble Lord, , and the noble Baroness, Lady
Thornhill, I ask about Section 106 money. The connection to local
social provision has been hugely important for schooling and
other community facilities. Can the Minister confirm that any
proposed changes will not lose this connection to local
provision?
I conclude by returning to highlight the work of the Church
Commissioners, who have begun to use church land more
specifically to build affordable housing that embodies the five
core values of good housing, as previously stated. In the
north-east, they are partnering with local councils and currently
plan to build 3,952 new homes, between 510 and 930 of
which—possibly more—will be affordable. I encourage local
developers to follow their lead.
With the rising cost of living, it is vital that urgent action is
taken. I reiterate my request to the Government to produce a
clear commitment and strategy for good-quality, affordable social
housing, built at net zero. Without it, this crisis will only
worsen, severely impacting children, families and households
across the country.
6.10pm
The (CB)
My Lords, it is always a pleasure to follow the right reverend
Prelate. I declare my professional interest as practising
chartered surveyor, and I follow the noble Lord, , in saying what a wonderful
chairman we had in the person of the noble Baroness, Lady
Neville-Rolfe, for the production of this report. Its
sharpness—the edge that it has—is her hallmark. What a privilege
it has been to serve on the Built Environment Committee and to
work with colleagues. I add my thanks to our clerk, policy
analyst and committee operations officer for their untiring
efforts.
For me it was a real pleasure to come across Professor Paul
Cheshire again. He was one of my lecturers when I studied at the
College of Estate Management 50 years ago. I just hope he felt
that some of the fairy dust and some of his wisdom had sunk
in.
I warned our chairman, the noble Lord, , that I might be making a bit
of a departure. I will leave the bulk of the report to speak for
itself because I think it largely does that. I should like to
address a little of what I might call the size of the remaining
iceberg that lies beneath the surface. I may be slightly nearer
to the noble Baroness, Lady Thornhill, than she might at first
suppose.
We concluded that behind delivery shortfalls against target there
is some lack of coherence in government policy in relation to
delivery, particularly in the area of planning, which has been
referred to. It is not that the Government do not have clearly
stated targets—they clearly do—but the mechanism for getting
results seems in disarray. A series of patch and repair
operations has been undertaken over many years with an absence of
thoroughgoing assessment of the implications in a very complex
interleaving of tiers of government, executive agencies,
international commitments, national priorities, societal and
special interests, along with significant infrastructure
challenges, not least when you have to meet them upfront as part
of a development process. This may be due to the number of
departments involved but also to the underresourcing of planning
departments. They are matched by increasingly financially
powerful volume housebuilders. They have been referred to in
other circumstances as showing oligopolistic tendencies.
I think there is a wide perception of minimal corporate ethics in
a sector that sits uncomfortably close to the political elite in
the sponsorship of party conferences, political donations and
photo opportunities for Prime Ministers and others wearing hard
hats and high-vis jackets emblazoned with corporate logos. These
might not be harmful of themselves, despite appearances, but
there is obvious potential for what might be called high-level
offline activity.
Closer to home, and with resource-starved authorities in
high-value areas, there is clear evidence that these influences
are being brought to bear in policy-making at local level,
often—I suspect, and this is certainly the suspicion of many
citizens—in priority to the express wishes of communities. After
all, local planning officers can be effortlessly outgunned by
skilled legal teams, even without recurring aspects that the
average citizen would perceive as fundamentally dishonest.
Strategic housing allocations are made but then built out at a
dribble, thus perpetuating high and growing house prices and
placing forward housing rollout in the hands of unaccountable
private companies.
In turn, this leads to further manipulation and horse dealing
over available sites. Railroading of developments is often done
via ruinously expensive appeals and inquiries. Despite clear
local and neighbourhood policies, citizens’ wishes are being
overridden. As the noble Lord, , pointed out, SME operators
have been squeezed; they simply cannot compete in this
environment. The public perceptions are negative, mistrustful and
disbelieving of the conditions and controls, especially Section
106 ones, that they are told local authorities are able to
impose.
Certainly, in my own area, one does not have to join up many of
the dots to understand what has been going on over the last 18
months between the majority party on the council and a series of
well-funded developers. Indeed, on the current matter of water
neutrality, which is well up the agenda, it is beginning to look
as if the clear principles set out by Natural England may be up
for grabs via a system of permits according to a tariff, with
long-term but ultimately unenforceable requirements of things
such as low-flow taps and diminutive bath-tubs. Of course, none
of these will diminish the core problem of growing abstraction
and the resultant damage to environmental assets—at least, not
any time soon.
Adequate delivery risks failure, not just in build-out rates and
the quality of place-making and durability of homes but in less
physical ways—for instance, rent charges, where a new freehold
house is tied into annual payments for maintenance and management
of common areas or public realm assets. That is the roadways,
hard and soft landscaping, storm water drainage arrangements,
play areas and maybe security systems and lighting—things that
have not been adopted by the local authority. These charges are
prone to being ratcheted up and can easily reach levels at which
mortgage companies may decline to lend. This has earned the name
“fleecehold”. Such additional charges, as compared with the
generality of homes in a district as a whole, cause value
writedowns and selectively unfair treatment. This is one of the
unsatisfactory outcomes we are dealing with.
During my own researches, I happened upon one local authority
that had set up a company to own and manage these rent charge
opportunities, explaining as it did so that it would make a
profit of several million pounds in the first few years of
operation. This is from a council that decides the planning
merits, sets the conditions and planning contributions, writes
the Section 106 agreement and has the power to adopt public realm
assets or not, as it chooses.
I could go on and explain—but I will not—how similar
cost-recovery schemes may in due course feed into new home owners
paying disproportionately for wider societal issues such as water
neutrality, as I mentioned, or, perhaps more topically still,
biodiversity net gain, and how the administration of these can
easily cross the line between obligations, objectively fair
administration and the appearance of disreputable practice. The
entire delivery process is therefore between rocks and hard
places, and sits above a crevasse.
The HBF—the noble Baroness, Lady Thornhill, referred to this—also
sent me the report. That set out 12 critical additional burdens
on the housebuilding sector, which cumulatively would add £20,000
to the build cost of every new home. That was an average; the
range was £19,000 to £21,000. If that is correct, then
affordability will go out of the window and, as the HBF suggests,
development viability with it. There is just too much being taken
out of the system.
I hope the Government will take careful note of the issues for
meeting housing demand that we have reported. What we have set
out are really the headlines; there is a good deal more subtext
underneath. We need to recalibrate and facilitate better social
housing build-out and, as the noble Lord, , has said, a better situation
for small and medium-sized enterprise. That will require a
substantially different model because, as I see it, resources
from housing development and the housing delivery process are
being dissipated.
6.20pm
of Fulham (Con)
My Lords, it is a great pleasure to follow the noble Earl, . I do not propose to be quite
as technical in my speech as he was in his; the expertise that he
has brought to this debate is much appreciated.
I start by congratulating and adding my thanks to my noble friend
Lady Neville-Rolfe, who led our committee; in the context of this
debate, I suppose she is best described as our foundation
chairman. She did an excellent job on this report and she is now
doing an excellent job in her new role as a government Minister.
I also add my congratulations to my noble friend on taking over the bed of
nails which is the chairmanship of this committee. I wish him all
success going forward; based on what he said today in his speech,
I have no doubt that he will be there for many years, producing
many good reports.
What we learned from this report is that, by general agreement,
300,000 houses a year is required. We are not achieving that.
Indeed, we heard a considerable amount of evidence that 300,000
houses a year is not enough; there would need to be 350, 000 or
even 400,000 houses a year. That raises some very interesting
questions, one of which the noble Lord, Lord Davies, raised in
his speech when he mentioned Harold Macmillan and the 1950s
housebuilding boom, which was largely concentrated on council
housing. That is certainly one solution. The problem with it in
the 1950s was the quality of housing that was put up and—as I
will come to, a bit, in my speech—the quality of the design of
the housing.
I want to take a little digression to one of the problems that,
as a London politician, I found in council housing generally,
which is that it tends to be a trap for the tenant. The great
problem is that, since it is so difficult to change the tenancy
for another tenancy, should the tenant wish to go and work
somewhere else—or family circumstances require them to go
somewhere else—they tend to get trapped in a place that may have
been appropriate at the time of the initial tenancy but, over
time, becomes inappropriate. It becomes very difficult if family
moves away and the tenant becomes isolated. So council housing is
not the panacea for everything, although it certainly has parts
of the solution.
The real problem in building 300,000 houses a year is of where
you are going to build them. That problem has presented our
housebuilding with enormous difficulties over the years. I take
up the concern of the noble Baroness, Lady Thornhill: this really
has to be resolved at a local level, because it has to get local
acceptance. That is acceptance by not just the local councils but
the local people in those areas, because that is where the
objections—the rebellion against the imposition of new
housing—will come from.
The real question that has to be addressed is: how do you
overcome that objection and persuade people that new housing in
their area will benefit them? That is extraordinarily difficult,
made worse by the fact that where you need to locate 300,000
houses is on the whole where the jobs are, where people
consequently already live and where the pressure on housing tends
to be already greatest. It is an extraordinarily difficult
problem. Any survey you care to do on where we need to put
housing will show one of the big areas is the south-east of
England, which is the most difficult place to get agreement to
put in housing.
I suggest there are lots of reasons why there are objections. One
is the impact on local services, obviously. It is about the lack
of new roads and new public transport. It is about the lack of
schooling and doctors, and of a decent sewerage system, which is
so catastrophic in terms of the pollution that we are seeing in
neighbourhoods. That needs to be resolved, but I suggest that one
of the really big issues is design.
Most of us in this House are old enough to remember that great
folk group the Weavers, and when Pete Seeger sang about
ticky-tacky “Little Boxes” being built. So much of the modern
housing that goes up—even if it is expensive, let alone the cheap
modern housing—is either ticky-tacky little boxes or ugly. We
used to build beautiful houses, in tune with the time in which
they were built. We used to have architects who were able to
design housing that people wanted to live in. I will give one
example from London’s experience: the Bedford Park estate, which
was a great development of the 1880s built by one of our greatest
architects, Richard Norman Shaw. It is still desirable to live
in, in a rather retro manner. But we need modern Richard Norman
Shaws who will, in the modern idiom, design buildings that people
want to live in, whether as houses or flats.
We can start doing that by creating houses that people find
attractive, and at the same time persuading communities that we
are building something which will enhance their community and
provide new homes—but do so for local people as well as people
coming in from outside, so that the children of the community
where the housing is being built can find somewhere to live near
their parents or grandparents, while they bring up children and
create a community which they can take pride in. If we can do
that, we stand a chance of solving this problem. But if we impose
from the top housing which is in the wrong place, badly serviced,
not near jobs or able to provide access to work, and which is
ugly so that people do not want to live in it, we will fail. We
have to overcome those problems and make the housing that we are
putting up something we can be proud of.
6.28pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I agree with pretty much everything the noble Lord,
, said, but particularly the
last part. A number of things have already been said, but I make
no apology for repeating my thanks to our committee secretariat,
led by Dee Goddard. I also thank the person in the chair, the
noble Baroness, Lady Neville-Rolfe. It was the first big piece of
work of a new committee, and I am very pleased to have been
associated with it.
It has been some time since we reported: 10 months since the
publication of our report. The main problems we identified remain
the same, though some of them clearly are getting worse. This is
particularly true when considering the issues raised in chapter 3
on “Housing types and tenures”. There are 24 million households
in England, with 65% owner-occupied, 19% privately rented and 17%
are homes for social rent. There have been significant changes in
these proportions in recent years. Owner-occupation is down from
71% in 2005. Social housing is dramatically down from 30% in
1980. The only sector that has grown, and quite dramatically, is
the private rented sector, which has doubled from 10% in
2003.
There is a real paradox at the heart of these figures. The sector
that has been growing the fastest is the sector which, as far as
householders are concerned, is the least popular.
Owner-occupation has long been the most popular form of tenure
and for social housing there is overwhelming evidence of
unfulfilled demand. One measure of it is that in 2021 there were
no fewer than 1,187,641 households on local authority waiting
lists. Faced with huge waiting lists for social housing and the
escalating costs of owner-occupation, people have no alternative
but to turn to the private rented sector.
There are, of course, plenty of private tenants in
well-maintained rentals that they can afford. However, the
evidence tells us that the picture of the sector overall is not
so rosy. There is lower continuity of tenure for private renters,
who move on average every four years, compared with social
renters, who move every 12 years, and owner-occupiers, who move
every 17 years. As we say in our report:
“Those living in the private rented sector are more likely to
live in poor quality, overcrowded conditions than
owner–occupiers, and often have limited forms of redress.”
We also know that in terms of monthly expenditure—this is
astonishing, but it is familiar to all of us—it is cheaper to be
an owner-occupier on a mortgage than to be a private renter. The
figures in our report are for 2020 and clearly will have changed
since then with all that has happened. At the time, they showed
that the average monthly cost for owner-occupiers in the
north-west, for example, was £576 compared with the average
monthly cost of private rent, which was £723. In nutshell, of the
three main forms of housing tenure, the fastest growing is the
least secure and the most expensive.
That almost defies economic logic, so here are the obvious
questions to the Minister. What plans, if any, do the Government
have to address the acute shortage of social housing? What are
the Government’s targets for the provision of new social, local
authority housing? I agreed with every word my noble friend Lord
Davies said and particularly with the speech of the right
reverend Prelate the Bishop of Durham—in fact, when he finished,
I very nearly said amen. What plans, if any, do the Government
have to enable those people on very high rents in private
accommodation to move towards home ownership, which, as we have
seen, is cheaper and for which there is clearly a huge
demand?
It is taken as read, throughout our report as well as by the
Government, that we need more homes. Most of this demand will
have to be met by new builds. However, there is another potential
source of supply among existing housing networks. Sadly, we do
not have much to say on this in the report; we could say only so
much. In paragraph 55, we report that, in England alone, there
are around 500,000 empty properties—we were given the figure of
479,000. Regrettably, as I said, our committee did not take
specific evidence on this, although we know that a number of
different local authorities are trying to tackle the problem in a
variety of ways. Empty homes that are neglected for long periods
can blight not just their streets but the wider neighbourhood.
While empty and neglected homes are clearly a problem, it is also
the case that 500,000 unused properties could be part of the
solution to housing demand. I ask the Minister: what is the
Government’s estimate of the number of empty properties and is
there any best-practice advice for local authorities about how to
deal with the issue? Surely, if the aim is to provide 300,000
more homes a year, reducing the number of empty properties could
be a very helpful part of the solution.
Whether we are talking about existing properties being renovated
or new houses being built, we must address the fundamental
problem of the supply of skilled people to do the work. You can
have all the planning permissions, all the environmentally
friendly targets and all the town planners and architects in the
world, but, at its heart, what is needed most of all are
bricklayers, plumbers, electricians, carpenters and all the
associated building trades. We spell out in our report the
existing acute skills shortage, which is destined to get worse.
Some 48,000 vacancies in the construction industry were recorded
between April and October last year. In the same period, 53% of
SME builders said that they were struggling to recruit carpenters
and 47% said the same about bricklayers. What is more,
“35% of the workforce are over 50. Only 20% … are … below
30”.
These are skilled trades requiring apprenticeships and for which
vacancies cannot be filled overnight. They are also trades that,
in practice, overwhelmingly recruit men. Only 8% of construction
apprenticeships are undertaken by women and only 5% of
construction workers identify at BAME. As we say in our
report:
“Diversity remains a major issue in construction trades … It will
be essential to draw on a wider talent base to meet the demand
for skills.”
There are many reasons for this shortage. I simply do not have
time to go into them all, but one is undoubtedly the difficulty
of career progression, as well as the fact that wages do not tend
to increase over a lifetime for most of the building trades.
Table 5 of our report shows that the median hourly rate for a
plumber in his 30s is £13.41 and in his 50s it is £13.59
—assuming he is still physically fit enough to do the job. As I
said, one of the challenges in this sector is the lack of career
progression. However, the blunt truth is that, unless the problem
of skills shortage is addressed, there will simply not be the
people to build the 300,000 houses that the Government are
committed to providing. I ask the Minister for her assessment of
just how serious this problem is and what measures she proposes
to address it.
Amid all the challenges in our report, at least there is
agreement on the objectives: we need more houses of good quality
at prices and rents that people can afford. If the Government
remain committed to their target of 300,000 builds, and to their
levelling-up agenda, the message of our report is that they need
to do better and quickly.
6.38pm
(CB)
My Lords, I am totally sympathetic to the point about skills and
training made by the noble Lord, . I will address that in a
different way, the manner of which I will inform the House of in
a moment. I have found this a fascinating debate, particularly as
it is not one that I would normally be identified with. I am
totally sympathetic to the approach of the noble Lord, , and his concerns about homes,
as I have been to those of all noble contributors. As he said,
homes are not necessarily being built in the right place. I will
concentrate on that point about land by adding a differing
dimension, which I fear may be considered out on a limb but not
out of sync.
Beyond having only one substantive but fundamental point that
pertains to planning applications, and by whom and how those
applications are managed, I support any move to introduce the
compelling of those who secure land for the construction of
housing projects, whether developers or construction entities, to
use that land in short order for the purpose for which the use
was granted or lose it. That could be easily achieved and the
Chancellor may care to take note of that.
I offer my remarks this afternoon not as a policy proposal, but
as a co-chair of two APPGs, one on the future of the United
Kingdom freight and logistics sector and the other on the future
of trade and investment, both of which have parallel criteria to
get things moving in the national interest. Both are undertaking
a strategic review and planning is a key component of the
former—but I speak, of course, as an individual.
I am in line with the initial remarks of the noble Earl, , and with how he intimated,
without specifically mentioning the detail, that existing airport
operations must be at the forefront of joined-up decision-making
when new housing developments are being considered and be
consistent with differing government policy. Planning processes
can hold the national interest hostage, given that airports are
prize assets which support the export ambitions of the United
Kingdom. Housing developments should not be built within the
noise envelope of an airport.
My concluding remarks will offer a case study, identifying one
such district authority, of when all this went horribly awry,
with national government having to intervene. It would be helpful
if the Government—for all that I imagine the Minister will defend
the case otherwise—approached decision-making across departments
when planning applications are considered in a way that was more
holistic, rather than with a silo mentality.
One principal objective of the 2013 aviation policy framework was
to ensure that air links continued to make the UK one of the
best-connected countries in the world, enabling it to compete
successfully for economic growth opportunities. The framework
noted that airports acted as focal points for business
development and employment by providing rapid delivery of
products by air and access to international markets. The
framework specifically recognised the importance of Heathrow and
East Midlands Airport, and identified that EMA acted as a hub for
freight, noting that three of the four global express air freight
providers, including DHL, maintained major operations at that
airport.
The Government are developing a long-term aviation strategy to
2050 and beyond. As part of this emerging strategy, the
Government have referred to a number of documents, including
Aviation 2050: The Future of UK Aviation, a consultative
publication from December 2018. I shall not tire the House by
quoting the detail of paragraphs 4.45 and 4.48, which
specifically recognise the importance of the 24-hour operation at
EMA, particularly the provision of night flights. It is clear
that the Government rightly consider air freight a particularly
important part of the UK economy, confirmed in paragraph 4.49,
recognise the importance of night flights at EMA and encourage
their continued growth.
Housing development in the wrong locations can have an adverse
impact on residents and local businesses, such as potential
development in the surroundings of national and regionally
significant airports. Two quotes from the National Planning
Policy Framework are worthy of note. One says:
“Planning policies and decisions should ensure that new
development can be integrated effectively with existing
businesses and community facilities … Existing businesses and
facilities should not have unreasonable restrictions placed on
them as a result of development permitted after they were
established.”
The second says:
“Where the operation of an existing business or community
facility could have a significant adverse effect on new
development (including changes of use) in its vicinity, the
applicant (or ‘agent of change’) should be required to provide
suitable mitigation before the development has been
completed.”
This is where it becomes complex, because a local authority is
the airport’s “competent authority”. Therefore, the local
authority is required to consider the “balanced approach” when
establishing noise-related operating restrictions at an airport.
The “balanced approach” is promoted by the International Civil
Aviation Organization and comprises four principal elements:
land-use planning and management; reduction of noise at source;
noise abatement operating procedure; and operating restrictions.
On land-use planning and management, the ICAO states that:
“Compatible land-use planning and management is also a vital
instrument in ensuring that the gains achieved by the reduced
noise of the latest generation of aircraft are not offset by
further residential development around airports.”
I end with my case study. A prime case has directly impacted the
aviation modal, with the Government having written to Uttlesford
District Council, in which district Stansted Airport resides,
confirming that it is to remain in special measures, which limit
its planning powers as not being in line with the Department for
Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, noting that UDC’s
decisions were “shameful”. I was adversely impacted by the
operations of Stansted Airport, both flying out of the airport
and, regrettably, when I returned, because of those decisions. I
must, however, place on record how grateful I am to the owner,
Manchester Airports Group, for its courtesy in giving me an
on-the-spot detailed briefing as to what on earth was going on at
that airport as a result of the types of decision-making that the
district council to which I referred made. Central government has
concluded that the number of major planning applications
overturned on appeal was unacceptable. The chief executive, Mr
Holt, was clear that the special measure vis-à-vis Uttlesford
District Council was “absolutely intrinsically linked” to the
absence of an acceptable local plan to deliver on government
targets, including for the smooth running of Stansted
Airport.
I felt that needed to be put on record in a debate on which,
frankly, I have a great deal of sympathy with the whole issue of
the housing and the planning elements. I give these my absolute
full-hearted support, but there are other issues that need to be
taken into account when we consider the national interest.
The Deputy Speaker () (Con)
My Lords, the noble Lord, , will speak in the
gap remotely, and I invite him to speak briefly.
6.47pm
(Lab) [V]
My Lords, an error on my part has led me to speak in the gap in a
truncated contribution and I apologise. This report is a
comprehensive canter round the course of housing demand. The
committee is to be congratulated. I want to speak narrowly.
Paragraph 180 states:
“The Local Government Association set out proposals to help
councils encourage faster build out rates”,
including
“a streamlined compulsory purchase process to acquire (at
pre-uplift value)”.
The words “pre-uplift value” need interpretation if the public
are to understand this report.
I have previously argued that some development land valuation
should not be based on planning decisions but on agricultural
value, with an uplift for administrative and infrastructural
redevelopment costs, which means CPO. I see no reason why huge
profits to landowners at the cost of house buyers should turn on
the granting of planning permissions. I further argue that while
Section 106 agreements are helpful, they are a complex
alternative: even where they sit alongside community
infrastructural levies, they often cannot deliver.
According to the report, at paragraph 54, the Affordable Housing
Commission reports a substantial increase in the private rental
sector and a contraction in social housing. Due to the timing,
the committee was unable to comment on the recent explosion in
interest rates and the consequent increased demand for cheaper
public sector rental property. The problem here is that pressure
on housing availability is being used not only by heavily
indebted landlords but also by others carrying little debt to
take advantage of housing shortage and force up rents. We have
reports of 25% to 30% increases at a time when working families
are under heavy pressure due to wider cost of living increases.
The truth is that the table in paragraph 53 of the report on
average monthly housing costs is now totally out of date as the
impact of inflation feeds through into increased rent levels.
Finally, I have just a few words on the taxation of rental
income. In a debate in 2017, I drew on work by the London Borough
of Newham, which has established a licensing system not only to
protect tenants but to ensure that tax is paid on landlord rental
incomes. The IPPR had recently estimated that the Revenue lost
£183 million in a single year in London alone. In Newham, only
13,000 out of 26,000 landlords had registered with HMRC for
self-assessment. I wish the Revenue well as it follows this up—I
hope it does so.
This is a brilliant report providing an abundance of research
material to be used in the year to come. I will certainly use it
again in further debates.
(Con)
My Lords, I too am on restricted time. Nevertheless, I record my
thanks to my noble friend Lady Neville-Rolfe and the staff of the
committee—
(Con)
I am very sorry, but I am afraid the noble Lord is not down to
speak in this debate, and we already have two other speakers in
the gap.
I am told that the noble Lord, , is welcome to speak in the
gap, but perhaps he could wait for the other two speakers who
already have their names down.
6.50pm
(CB)
My Lords, I am speaking in the gap, with my apologies for failing
to get my name down for this excellent debate last Friday. As a
proud member of the committee—and with sincere thanks to our
wonderful chair, the noble Baroness, Lady Neville- Rolfe, and our
brilliant team, led by Dee Goddard—I will cut to the chase and
pull out just one key ingredient from this valuable report:
namely, meeting the demand and need for housing for older
people.
The need for new homes that reflect the UK’s demographic shift is
a prominent theme of our report, with one in four people being
over 65 in the near future. Retirement accommodation addresses
health and well-being, combats loneliness, reduces fuel poverty
and prevents the need for and crippling cost of residential care.
An older person right-sizing will so often achieve “two for one”
by also bringing an underoccupied family home on to the market.
Catering for those requiring more accessible, manageable and
energy-efficient accommodation also benefits the overstretched
NHS and local care services. Some 16,000 older people in hospital
on any given day cannot be discharged because their home simply
cannot take them back. While they continue to occupy a hospital
bed, others keep waiting.
In a report published last week, Professor Mayhew of the ILC
argues for a programme of 50,000 new homes for older people each
year—one-sixth of the Government’s overall homes target—but the
committee’s report notes that little progress is being made. The
current pipeline is for less than 8,000 homes. The volume
housebuilders are not interested. Stimulus from planning
requirements, and stamp duty incentives—as for first time
buyers—are needed. All those involved in this field welcomed the
announcement in May 2021 of a governmental older people’s housing
task force, with confirmation last February but with little news
since then. Can the Minister update us on progress with this key
initiative, involving the Ministers for both housing and
care?
6.53pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I apologise for joining what has become a bit of a club
of gap speakers. I also thank the noble Baroness, Lady
Neville-Rolfe, for her excellent role as chair, and all the other
members of the committee.
I will mention a couple of things about new builds, insulation
and design. I do not think any other noble Lord has mentioned it,
but the impression I got from the many witnesses we heard was
that the key was to keep the price down. If you think about it,
it does cost a bit more to insulate a house properly, to have
proper water services and sewage disposal—I am not going to go
into that now—and to design homes in a way that aligns with
future transport provision. We do not seem to be doing that, and
that compares very unfavourably with many parts of the continent
I have seen. I hope we can do something about it.
Let us not forget that there is also a problem with the existing
housing stock. People will be shivering in their homes because
they cannot afford to or cannot get grants to insulate—there is a
very large number of houses in that category. In his very
powerful speech, my noble friend mentioned empty houses. I live
in London and lease from Camden Council. In my little block, one
house has been empty for a year because the poor tenant died.
Nothing has happened; it needs a good clean, but nothing at all
has happened. I am sure that is very common across many cities.
The 300,000 a year target is important, but let us try to make
sure that the existing stock is used to the full and
upgraded.
6.55pm
(Con)
My Lords, I am grateful for the opportunity to speak and I
apologise that I was not able to get my name in at the proper
point before the debate began.
Building 300,000 new homes a year was once a matter for
rejoicing, if achieved, but now there is more likely to be a hail
of protest when the schemes to meet that target are brought
forward. Demand continues to exceed supply, prices rise and the
dream of homeownership fades. It is amazing that the ferocity of
opposition to many of these schemes comes from a belief about not
wanting to see the loss of green fields, yet the people who feel
like that do not seem to recognise that, as of April 2018, 91.5%
of land in England is classified as non-developed.
A roof over your head is a contributory step towards a caring
society. We should remember that this is a strong ambition for
many people and, if they can fulfil that wish, perhaps in the
same village or town where their parents have lived, they are
helping to build a society with a strong social structure.
What can be done? We need more planners, as my noble friend
said, and this needs to be an
enhanced profession. The building industry ought to try to shed
its image which, though it may not like it, is of people wading
around in mud and lugging piles of bricks. The building industry
has far more about it now, much of which should attract bright
young people.
On local authorities, we picked up some signs in the course of
our hearings that large unitary authorities and combined
authorities are making rather more progress in building houses,
maybe because their packages are better and more attractive due
to the greater scope they have for place and space.
Wider public consultation is the real difficulty, as has been
brought out. In collective form, with representatives of all the
different interests in the effect of plans, there are signs that
people will come to recognise how a well-thought-out development
can help keep schools not short of pupils, strengthen the
viability of neighbourhood shops, maintain local transport,
produce more insulated homes and boost care of the elderly. This
is the better side of development and what we must create and
promulgate.
6.59pm
(LD)
My Lords, I start by declaring my interests as an honorary
president of the National Home Improvement Council and an
honorary fellow of the Institution of Civil Engineers. For the
purposes of this debate, I also declare that I am a mortgage-free
owner-occupier, and that my wife and I have a leasehold flat in
London. I am part of the housing-privileged, as are nearly all
the opinion-formers in this building. We would do well to
remember, when we talk about the housing crisis and housing
issues, that our own perspectives may perhaps be limiting our
understanding of just how traumatic and difficult it is for many
people. In that light, I believe that this report is a very
clear-headed and well-evidenced document that, as a committee
member, I am very ready to endorse.
I will not review the speeches made by the 13 contributors so
far, particularly as nine of us have been on the committee and we
have probably spoken quite enough to each other about this
already. I will go straight to the Government’s response to the
report, which I have described elsewhere as being
half-hearted—although I have to say that there have been three
different Governments to choose from, and goodness knows exactly
how the industry is supposed to plan when housing targets are
yo-yoing all over the place. This year started off with 300,000
as the Government’s target, which was subsequently dismissed by
the next Government as being Stalinist. As I understand it, the
target was reinstated by the following Government to be 300,000
again—and we are of course waiting to see what happens on 17
November. In fact, with current policies, never mind the current
economic situation, 300,000 is not so much Stalinist as
fantasist.
We have had four Housing Ministers this year since our report was
published. Is it any wonder that housing completions are falling,
house price inflation is outrunning actual inflation, as it has
been for over a decade, and, as the report makes clear, the
balance between supply and demand for both social homes and homes
in the private rented sector is totally out of kilter? At the
very bottom end of the market, homelessness and sofa surfing are
rapidly rising trends.
What are the solutions and how close are the new ministerial team
to applying them? Noble Lords in their contributions so far have
made it clear what some of those questions and some of those
answers are. I will take just a quick look at local planning and
ask the Government to say what they believe the locus of
decision-making should be. Should it be decided in Whitehall, in
the town hall, or in the local community? The committee, four
Ministers ago, got a very clear answer that that Government and
that Housing Minister believed that the decision should be based
in the local community, who gave a great uptick to the idea of
neighbourhood plans, which have been succeeding in many parts of
the country. Will the Minister tell noble Lords what the current
policy is on where planning should be and what it should be
delivering?
I want to draw attention to one statistic which has not come into
the debate today, which is that there are over 600,000 unused
planning permissions for homes already in existence. The reality
is that housebuilders build houses to sell. Most years they can
sell 100,000 to 150,000 homes. If the Government want more homes
built, they have to bribe or pay for those homes to be built. The
report in front of noble Lords found that Help to Buy certainly
provided the bribe okay, but there was very little evidence that,
as a result, more homes were built using that money. Instead,
housebuilders still sold 150,000 homes, but they cost a lot
more.
Perhaps noble Lords will indulge in a thought experiment. Just
imagine that there were suddenly no planning restrictions. How
many homes would house- builders build each year? The answer is:
not more than 150,000, although they would, to some extent, be in
different places. Incidentally, it would probably be less than
that, as the asset value of their jealously hoarded land banks
would collapse and so, probably, would their business.
Ministers have to decide, if they want homes that are beyond the
capacity of the private market to absorb, how much they want to
pay to get those extra homes. They will certainly get the most
homes for their bucks if they put the money into local council
housebuilding. I am making the economic argument—a financial,
Treasury argument—that if you want those homes, social housing is
the way to get them at the lowest cost per house. They will also
get those homes with fewer delays and fewer broken bones if they
let local communities take control of their planning and stop
imposing Whitehall master plans.
However, market failure is not the only barrier to more and
better homes built more quickly. There is a major capacity and
skills deficit in the industry. I was delighted to hear what the
right reverend Prelate the had to say about what is
happening in Sunderland to try to address part of that. That
problem is an accelerating and deepening one, made worse by some
of the actions of the biggest housebuilders.
The Halifax produced its running total on house prices, and the
average house price in Britain last month was £292,000. That
appeared in the newspapers as bad news, because it was a fall
from the rise in the previous month, but what they did not report
was that it was an 8.6% rise compared with 12 months before. The
average house price has risen by £28,000 in 12 months. In London,
where the average house price, according to the Halifax, is
£551,000, the price has risen by more than £40,000.
According to a publication called Money Matters, the top eight
housebuilders made £7 billion profit in the past two years. That
includes Barratt, Taylor Wimpey, Redrow, Persimmon, Berkeley and
others. They are all in the Home Builders Federation, their trade
association. I am not sure whether it is an oligopoly, as the
noble Earl, , said or whether it is a 1960s
trade union, but the outcome is pretty much the same: very low
standards of work, with many faults and rampant poor
workmanship—the situation is so bad that purchasers prefer to buy
a 30 year-old house than a new one. If you were selling 30
year-old cars from the forecourt, you would expect them to go for
a lower price than the brand new ones, but that is not what we
have.
Yet, the HBF, in its report to noble Lords which has already been
referenced in this debate, Building Homes in a Changing
BusinessEnvironment, has a self-serving list of 12 areas of
additional costs, for which it pleads that it needs recompense
or, better still, delay or abolition of those 12 imposts. If it
does not get that, it is quite clear: it will not build as many
affordable homes. It threatens to offset the extra costs it
alleges will arise against its Section 106 contribution—which, in
2019-20, delivered 51% of affordable homes. It still found space
to complain about the loss of Help to Buy, which was fattening
its members’ wallets, obviously, despite the committee’s evidence
that it was a waste of money as far as getting extra homes was
concerned.
So, what were those 12 things? Electric vehicle charging points
were one. Upgrading homes to produce better energy performance
and biodiversity net gain—matters that the noble Earl, , referred to—was another. Even
the levy to put right Grenfell’s cladding failures was on the
developers’ list of unbearable costs that meant that they could
build fewer affordable homes.
Housebuilders have inflated margins not just on their sales, with
their multi-billion pound profits, but on their cost estimates
for the 12 imposts that they are complaining about. I cannot go
into those as we do not have the time but nowhere in the HBF’s
report to noble Lords is there any hint that not only will
purchasers of a new home nowadays expect to have an electric
vehicle charging point but that having zero heating bills is a
rather good sales pitch just now.
Of course, not a moment’s thought is given to the idea that
maybe, just maybe, housebuilders should invest more in producing
decent homes and take a dip in their profits. If they did, of
course, that would be one important step towards letting SMEs
back into the market. They develop smaller sites, develop more
quickly, develop to higher standards and are usually more locally
accountable.
These are my questions for the Government. First, are the
Government committed to building 300,000 homes a year? Secondly,
are they willing to accept the logic of the lowest-cost delivery
of the homes that the market cannot provide, and to use what
money there is after 17 November to invest in social housing?
Thirdly, will they resist the HBF’s blackmail and insist on it
raising money to pay for Grenfell cladding replacements, higher
environmental standards in and around homes, and zero-carbon
standards? Fourthly, are the Government ready to work with the
whole construction industry to boost skills and capacity, debug
the supply chain and support new entrants on to the housebuilding
scene? If so, this report will have done its job.
7.11pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I thank the noble Lord, , for his detailed introduction
of this important report; I also thank the members and former
chair of the committee.
What was discovered? A UK housing market in which
“too many people are living in expensive, unsuitable, poor
quality homes.”
To meet future housing demand, the report’s recommendations
focused on seven areas, many of which have been mentioned time
and again in this House in various debates. Planning reform,
social housing provision and skills shortages were all deemed
failures over the past 12 years of Tory Governments, whoever was
in charge.
Government choices over those 12 years have broken our housing
system, allowing developers to maximise profits, as noted by the
previous speaker, and build housing for investment rather than
good-quality, safe, secure and affordable homes. They have broken
the link between work and affordable, secure housing for many
renters and first-time buyers. The Government built only 5,955
social rent homes in 2020—a 12% decrease on the previous year and
an 85% decrease from 11 years ago.
The scale of the housing crisis means that we need a bold new
approach that underlines the importance of housing as a human
right and the bedrock of stable, secure family life, giving
people a stake in their communities and societies and supporting
opportunity and aspiration. Indeed, that is the first layer of
Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. Labour reforms would allow
communities to build the right homes in the right places and at
prices that local people can afford. We would rebalance power
between developers and communities by reforming arcane purchasing
powers to stop speculators reaping all the rewards and closing
the loopholes that developers use to wriggle out of affordable
housing commitments. We would ensure that local councils have
stronger powers to deliver the affordable housing that their
communities need, not the housing that will make the most profit
for developers.
Labour would give first-time buyers first chances on new homes
and stop foreign buyers buying up homes off plan, before local
people can get a look-in. We would set out an ambition to
re-establish the link between genuinely affordable housing and
average earnings, bringing affordable rents and the dream of
homeownership closer for those locked out of the system
today.
There are nearly 1 million more people in the private rental
sector than there were when the Government came to power in 2010.
Too many people are stuck in a system with no power to challenge
rogue landlords, no savings to get on the housing ladder and
housing that falls below acceptable standards. All those renters
need a deal that gives them the security and dignity they
deserve. Some 800,000 fewer households of people under the age of
45 now own their home.
The Government’s current proposal to extend the right to buy will
only worsen the chronic shortage of affordable homes; it does
nothing to fix the lack of social housing and is totally lacking
in ambition for millions stranded in the private rental sector.
In England, 190,000 homes have been lost since the Tories came to
power in 2010. That number is equivalent to all the homes in
Bristol. Ministers have failed to deliver the promised
replacement for homes sold through right to buy. Less than 5% of
the stock has been replaced. Now, for the third time in seven
years, Ministers are promising expansion of right to buy into
housing associations, with no plan to increase the number of new
social homes or genuinely affordable homes to buy. This will lead
only to more people unable to secure a home.
One major reform in the Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill
relates to scrapping Section 106 agreements, which have been
talked about several times this evening, and replacing them with
a new national infrastructure levy. I assure noble Lords that,
during my tenure as leader of Newport City Council—I am sure the
Minister also experienced this when she was a council
leader—every negotiation on a Section 106 agreement was
hard-fought, as developers employed expensive legal experts to
deviate from these agreements wherever they can. Doing away with
Section 106 would be completely disastrous to ensuring that
developers deliver a proportion of affordable and social housing
within new developments, because the proposed levy would replace
this delivery mechanism, with revenues going to local authorities
to build infrastructure as well as housing. Local authorities
would therefore take both the financial risk and responsibility.
In the current financial and political climate, that is another
unaffordable option for local government.
But Labour has a plan. We will build more affordable houses,
linking the definition of affordable to local wages for the first
time. We will build more social homes and give first-time buyers
first chances. We are going to rebuild our social housing stock
and bring homes back into the ownership of local councils and
communities, with home ownership opened up to millions more. We
will tilt the balance of power back to private renters through a
powerful new renters’ charter and a new decent homes standard,
written into law. The charter will have far-reaching consequences
for those in rented accommodation, including by ending Section 21
evictions, reducing eviction powers for landlords whose tenants
are in arrears, introducing four-month notice periods, creating a
national register of landlords and initiating a legally binding
decent homes standard in the private rental sector.
We will close the loopholes developers exploit to avoid building
more affordable housing and put an end to the outrageous practice
of foreign buyers purchasing swathes of new housing developments
off plan, before local people can even see them. We have an
ambition to re-establish the link between genuinely affordable
housing and average earnings, bringing affordable rents and home
ownership closer for those locked out of the system.
I conclude by asking the Minister the following questions, some
of which my noble friend and others addressed earlier.
While building more homes is essential to address the housing
crisis, supply alone will not fix the affordability crisis, which
is as much a part of the housing crisis as pure numbers. Last
year, there were fewer than 7,000 social homes built in England.
What plans do the Government have to increase social
housebuilding? What does the Minister believe is an acceptable
number of social homes to build each year, and will the Social
Housing (Regulation) Bill deliver this?
7.19pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Levelling Up, Housing & Communities () (Con)
My Lords, I begin by thanking the noble Lord, , for securing this important
debate on the committee’s report. I also thank the noble
Baroness, Lady Neville-Rolfe, the noble Lord, , and the members of the Built
Environment Committee for their thorough inquiry into housing
demand and the subsequent report. Let me also thank all noble
Lords for their contributions today. It has been a very
wide-ranging but extremely challenging and interesting debate. If
I may, I shall go through the tenets of the report and the issues
arising from it in this debate.
I start by saying that housebuilding is a priority for this
Government. We are committed to continue working towards our
ambition of delivering 300,000 new homes a year. However, our
focus is not just on numbers. The types of homes provided, their
quality, the infrastructure that new developments need and the
communities that they are in all matter very much.
The committee’s report highlighted the need to give full
consideration to our ageing population, especially those older
people living alone, when developing housing policy. I thank the
noble Lord, , for all the work he does in this
area of housebuilding. My department is working closely with the
Department of Health and Social Care and with housing, health and
social care stakeholders to assess how we can support the growth
of a thriving older people’s housing sector. The affordable homes
programme, enabling the delivery of housing for older, disabled
and other vulnerable people, is extremely important to this
Government. Our older people’s housing task force will also look
at ways to improve the choice of and access to housing options
for these groups, particularly older people. I understand that
this is being taken forward by the new Housing Minister and that
a date will be announced for an older people’s housing task force
in due course.
Turning to housing types and tenures, our commitment is that
there should be enough social homes and fewer families housed in
temporary accommodation in this country. That is important to us.
We do not have targets because we just make sure that we have
enough social homes, particularly family homes, so that families
are not in temporary accommodation—this needs repeating. Since
2010, we have delivered over 598,900 new affordable homes, of
which over 157,200 are for social rent. The Government are also
committed to reducing the need for temporary accommodation by
preventing homelessness before it occurs. To this end, we are
investing £2 billion in tackling homelessness and rough sleeping
over the next three years. These are all issues rightly brought
up by the noble Lords, and , the right reverend Prelate
the , and the noble Earl,
.
The report outlined the importance of home ownership. Since its
publication, the Help to Buy equity loan scheme has ended, on 31
October 2022. From the scheme’s launch in 2013, it has supported
over 361,000 households to buy a new home and boosted housing
supply: 37% of all homes sold using the scheme would not
otherwise have been built.
We have also expanded the first-time buyers’ relief by increasing
the level at which first-time buyers start paying stamp duty from
£300,000 to £425,000. First-time buyers will be able to access
this relief on property purchases up to £625,000, compared with
£500,000 previously. Our shared ownership and right-to-buy
schemes also continue to help people into home ownership and out
of the rented sector.
SMEs have a vital role in making the housing market more diverse,
competitive and resilient, as we heard from my noble friend
. We have put in place a
package of measures to support them. This includes our £1 billion
ENABLE Build guarantee scheme to reduce the cost of debt for
SMEs. Since publication of the committee’s report earlier this
year, we have launched the £1.5 billion levelling up home
building fund, which builds on the more than £2 billion of
development finance that was invested under the home building
fund and continues to support SMEs and new entrants into the
sector. Through the Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill, changes
to the planning system will support SMEs to build more homes by
making the planning process easier to navigate, faster and more
predictable.
Many noble Lords brought up issues concerning planning. I
particularly thank the noble Baroness, Lady Thornhill, who gave
us the real nitty-gritty of what it is like in a local authority
and the challenges we have all faced in the planning system—the
challenges of what government, local authorities and, in
particular, communities want. For me, the important thing that
was brought up was the fact that you need to take communities
with you. That is what local government is very good at, and we
need to spend more time doing that because that is the way we get
our local communities supporting the local plans early on; then
we get the houses built that they and we need in this
country.
The report made several recommendations on the planning system. A
number of these recommendations have been addressed in the
Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill, which is currently making its
way through the House of Commons and will be in this House pretty
soon. I will briefly cover these in turn.
The Government continue to stay committed to the planning
measures in the Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill as they form a
key part of the Government’s response to the challenge of
levelling up the country. The Bill will modernise our planning
system by putting local people at its heart, which will deliver
more of what communities want. The reformed system will champion
beautiful design, in keeping with local style and preferences,
and ensure that development is sustainable and accompanied by the
infrastructure that communities need.
Our reforms will ensure that local plans are under- pinned by
better data, making them more transparent and easier to
understand. This will enable local communities to more easily
influence and comment on their emerging plans. The local plan
preparation process will also be more standardised and shorter,
supported by streamlined evidence-based requirements to reduce
the burdens on local authorities—something for which they have
been asking for a long time. The increased ability for local
communities to get involved in planning processes will ensure
that development is brought forward in a way that works best for
local people.
The Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill gives the Government
powers to create a new infrastructure levy. This is something
else that my noble friend and other noble Lords brought
up. The levy will aim to capture land value uplift at a higher
level than the current developer contribution regime, allowing
local authorities to use the proceeds to provide the affordable
housing and infrastructure that communities need. The levy will
deliver at least as much, if not more, affordable housing than
the current system of developer contributions. This will be
secured through regulations and policy, supported by provisions
in the Bill.
There were a number of questions on the levy, which I will try to
answer. My noble friend asked whether the levy will be
for only that site. Under the levy, local authorities will be
required to prepare a new document called an infrastructure
delivery strategy, which will make it much clearer for
communities what will be provided and when.
My noble friend asked a further question on
the levy. Local authorities will be able to borrow against
infrastructure levy receipts and to build up cash reserves from
the payment of the levy—again, something local government has
been asking for. This will help local authorities to fund
infrastructure that communities need.
Neighbourhood planning was brought up a number of times by
several noble Lords. Neighbourhood planning is an important part
of our planning system. It will now have greater weight in
planning decisions, but we are also looking at allowing local
communities to provide a simpler neighbourhood priorities
statement which will not take as long. That can then be reflected
in a neighbourhood plan as time allows.
We are proposing to make the levy a non-negotiable charge on a
fixed proportion of the gross development value. That will reduce
the negotiation issues to which, as we have heard from a number
of noble Lords, Section 106 agreements are sometimes prone.
Greater certainty and transparency around cost and the ability to
factor expenditure into the price paid for the land should mean
that affordable housing and infrastructure delivery is
improved.
The Bill will require housing developers formally to notify the
local authority via a development commencement order when they
commence development. We are also modernising and streamlining
existing powers for local authorities to serve completion
notices—sometimes called “build-out”—which I know is very
important to a number of noble Lords. These measures will
increase transparency on build-out and make it easier for local
authorities to take action where slow build-out occurs.
The committee’s report highlighted the importance of local
planning authorities. It is vital that we have well-resourced,
efficient and effective planning departments. To enable this, we
are working alongside the sector to design a suite of targeted
interventions to support the development of critical skills and
build capacity across local planning authorities. As part of this
work, the department is supporting local authorities in the
development of new digital tools which will help make planning
processes more efficient. We also intend to consult on an
increase in planning fees that will help provide additional
resources to support the delivery and improvement of planning
services.
The committee’s report also suggested that we consider how best
to update the calculation of local housing need. As with all
policies, we are monitoring the impact of the standard method,
particularly the impact of changes to the way we live and work,
as that becomes clearer. We are developing policy on this topic
and intend to set out further thinking on the direction of travel
as soon as we are able to.
Many noble Lords brought up the skills issue. The committee’s
report covered the importance of skills in meeting housing
demand, and we are working to address skills shortages across the
construction industry. The Government are increasing funding for
apprenticeships to £2.7 billion in 2024-25. This will continue to
support apprenticeships in non-levy employers, often SMEs, for
which government will continue to meet 95% of apprenticeship
training costs. I thank the right reverend Prelate the for giving us the example
of Sunderland, where local colleges are taking this up and
realise how important this sector is in increasing the skills
base.
We are also part of a construction skills delivery group which
has agreed new actions, including greater recruitment of
apprentices, increased support for T-levels and improved routes
into the industry. This work has had real-world impacts already.
Apprenticeship starts in the construction sector in 2021-22
reached more than 32,000, exceeding pre-pandemic levels. As part
of the building safety agenda, we are also working to develop a
suite of national competence standards for individuals working on
buildings.
I am conscious of the time. There was quite a lot of discussion
on quality and design. As I said at the beginning, it is not just
about numbers; it is about quality of housing. The quality of
housing is fundamental to the well-being of communities and helps
create thriving neighbourhoods. The levelling-up White Paper
housing mission outlined the Government’s ambition to reduce the
number of non-decent rented homes by 50% by 2030, with the
biggest improvements in the worst-performing areas. This will be
achieved through new minimum standards for privately rented homes
and broader reforms to the social rented sector.
The noble Lord, , brought up a couple of
issues, particularly on energy usage in homes. The Government are
investing £12 billion in the Help to Heat schemes, which will
allow investment in the housing stock we already have to make
houses more energy efficient—things such as boiler upgrades,
sustainable warmth competitions and home upgrade grants. There
are grants out there and I am happy to give the noble Lord
further details on that.
The noble Lord, , brought up what we are going
to do to make future homes more sustainable. From 2025, the
future homes standard will ensure that new homes produce at least
75% less CO2 emissions than those built in 2013. These homes will
be future-proofed with low-carbon heating and high levels of
energy efficiency. That is an important part of where we are
going on new homes.
My noble friend mentioned modern methods of
construction, which I am very interested in because that might be
one way in which we can deliver more homes much faster. The
report made additional recommendations about modern methods of
construction. By embracing MMCs, housebuilders can deliver
good-quality, energy-efficient new-build homes more quickly. The
Government are working to address strategic barriers, notably the
lack of component standardisation across the industry and the
difficulties in obtaining product warranties, and therefore
insurance and mortgages. The work we are doing will continue to
provide assurance around the quality and safety of MMCs to bring
them on to the market.
To conclude, I thank all noble Lords once again for their
contributions today.
(CB)
It is getting late, but will the Minister kindly undertake to
give the Government’s considered view on the whole question of
possibly district councils, and certainly the national
Government, having a key role in the decision-making over central
infrastructure projects when it comes to planning permissions
being given for the housing? I do not expect one now, but will
the Minister kindly undertake to give a really considered view on
that and write to me?
(Con)
I was going to mention the noble Viscount and the issues of large
infrastructure, such as airports, before I finished.
I thank my noble friend for moving the debate and look
forward to continuing the discussion and working collaboratively
on the issues raised with noble Lords and the committee as it
moves forward. The time is getting late. I know I have not
answered everybody’s questions, but I will take a long look at
Hansard, put out a letter to all members of the committee and put
a copy in the Library.
7.40pm
(Con)
My Lords, I am grateful to my noble friend for that comprehensive
response. I apologise to the House, as I should have said when I
first spoke that, in addition to the other registered interests
that I declared, I am also an officer of the APPG for SME
housebuilders; I should have said that, since it was clearly
relevant, but it slipped my mind.
I am very grateful to all noble Lords who have spoken. If I may
say so without giving offence, it has been a livelier and more
challenging debate that I had expected when we started out. There
have been many points made and much illumination cast. Many
points have been made with which I could agree and some with
which I do not agree. If the role of my noble friend the Minister
is to respond to the points made in the debate, perhaps my role
ought to be in some way to fuse together all the strands that
arise from it, to create one single, coherent policy on which all
of us could agree and with which we could move forward; but I
fear that that would be well beyond my abilities.
I will use the couple of minutes at my disposal to focus on a
single point, which struck me with great force. It was a point
made by the noble Earl, , when he referred to the fact
that, with new housing developments of any size, the financial
and managerial responsibility for external amenities is
increasingly being placed on the householders through a service
charge.
I mentioned that I was a member of the board of the Ebbsfleet
Development Corporation. We have seen many historical planning
permissions granted before the corporation was formed now being
implemented, and this is the pattern of what is happening. These
are services that the rest of us expect to be maintained and
provided largely by the local authority through the council tax
that we pay. They are to do with parks, street trees, grass on
the verges and such things; yet these households are paying
directly for the amenities as well as paying a full council tax
to their local authority. I draw attention to this simply because
I believe, and the noble Earl may agree, that this will not be
sustainable, politically or financially, for very much longer. It
may be the next scandal, like excessive ground rents, which are
now largely dealt with. In this case, it will be service charges,
not ground rents; I think that will be the next scandal that the
Front Bench—the Government—are going to have to reckon with.
This is the only point that I pick out from the debate because I
thought it needed amplifying, and I agreed so much with it. With
that, I thank everybody who has participated and beg to move the
Motion standing in my name.
Motion agreed.
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