At the National Housing Federation Annual Conference, Chief
Executive David Orr will today warn that social housing funding
is in crisis, unless Government is prepared to make a break with
the past and start funding new genuinely affordable homes.
The warnings come as the Federation -- which represents housing
associations, social landlords to over 2.7 million homes --
publishes a report outlining dramatic shifts in public spending
in housing. The report shows that the nation’s commitment to
building homes has fallen from £11.4bn in 2009 to £5.3bn in 2015
-- from 0.7% to 0.2% of the total GDP. Despite this, more than a
million families remain on the housing waiting list.
While the amount of money going into building new social homes
has fallen precipitously, the nation is spending more than ever
supporting people to live in costly rental properties through
housing benefit. Over the last 20 years, spending on housing
benefit has risen from £16.6bn to £25.1bn.
Housing someone in the private rented sector instead of a social
home costs an additional £21 every week. In fact, the report
found that the amount of housing benefit going to private
landlords has almost doubled over the last decade to £9.1bn in
2015/16.
And yet there is currently not a single penny available to build
social rent, affordable housing for those on the lowest incomes.
Following the 2010 Government decision to halt funds to social
rent, construction dropped off sharply. In 2010/11, work was
started on almost 36,000 social rented homes, the next year on
just over 3,000. Today, housing associations are still delivering
some social rented homes through their own cross-subsidy but
nothing like at previous or needed levels.
Demand for new homes is not slowing down; the population of
England is projected to increase by 17% until 2039 – an
additional 9m people.
Making more capital available to social homebuilders, like
housing associations, and then giving them the flexibility to
charge rents appropriate to residents’ incomes is the way
forward. The £1.1bn that remains unspent on Starter Homes should
be redirected to building homes for social rent. With this money,
housing associations could build 20,000 of the most affordable
homes.
David Orr, Chief Executive at the National Housing Federation
said:
“It is absurd that we’re spending less on building social housing
than we did in the nineties – there are even more people today on
housing waiting lists than then despite increasingly stringent
criteria.
“We know we need more, better quality social housing. And yet,
rather than putting public money into building the homes we need,
we are propping up rents in a failing market. Ultimately, this is
poor value for the taxpayer and has a knock-on effect on everyone
struggling to rent or buy.
“The Prime Minister is right that we’ve not paid social housing
enough attention. After the tragic fire at Grenfell, this crisis
can no longer be ignored. The Government must be bold and make a
break with the past by making money available to build genuinely
affordable homes.
“There’s more than a billion pounds that remains unspent on
Starter Homes. Let’s put this money to use and let housing
associations build 20,000 of the genuinely affordable homes the
nation needs.”
ENDS
Notes for Editors:
For more information, graphics and spokespeople, please get in
touch with prteam@housing.org.uk or
on 020 7067 1146
Click here to read the
report. Please do not share this link before 00.00 Tuesday
19th September.
Data sources:
-
· Housing
development figures: Eurostat, General government expenditure by
function (COFOG)
-
· Housing
benefit figures: DWP Benefit expenditure caseload tables 2017,
Table 1b and DWP Expenditure and Caseload forecasts 2017
-
· Housing
starts figures: Affordable Housing Starts and Completions in
England funded by the Homes and Communities Agency and the
Greater London Authority, DCLG Live Table 1012
-
· Population
projection: ONS population projections for England
MP, Labour's Shadow Secretary
of State
for Housing, responding to new research by the National Housing Federation
showing that social housing spending is at a record
low, said:
“Conservative Ministers have washed their
hands of any responsibility to build the homes families on
ordinary incomes need.
“Under Labour in 2009/10 we started building
almost 40,000 homes for social rent. By last year this had fallen
by 98 per cent to fewer than
1,000.
“Ministers try to hide their failure to build
more affordable homes by branding more homes ‘affordable’. The
Conservative definition of affordable housing now includes homes
close to full market rent and on sale for up to
£450,000.
"Ministers have turned their back on the
millions of families struggling with high housing
costs. It's no wonder that public concern about housing is around
the highest level in 40
years. Only Labour has a credible
long-term plan to build the genuinely affordable
homes to rent and buy that our country needs."