England worst place in developed world to find
housing, says report
Quarter of UK private renters spending over 40% of
income on housing amid warning people are ‘trapped in poverty’
Robert
Booth Social affairs correspondent
Thu 5 Oct
2023 00.01 BST
England is
now “the most difficult place to find a home in the developed world”,
housebuilders have claimed in a snapshot of the housing crisis that also found
a greater proportion of people in England live in substandard properties than
the European Union average.
The Home
Builders Federation (HBF), an industry group representing companies that build
for private sale, found that England has the lowest percentage of vacant homes
per capita in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), a group of 38 nations, including most of the EU the US, Japan and
Australia.
It drew the
comparisons before next week’s Labour party conference, as housebuilders again
called for planning restrictions to be eased to accelerate construction.
About a
quarter of private renters in the UK are also “overburdened” by housing costs –
spending more than 40% of income, compared with just 9% in France and 5% in
Germany, according to OECD data.
Labour has
said it might release greenbelt for building when it is “dilapidated, neglected
scrubland” and will “put social and genuinely affordable housing at the very
heart of our plans to jump-start the housebuilding industry”.
Stewart
Baseley, the executive chair of the HBF said the figures are “a wake-up call,
demonstrating the urgent need to act now to prevent us falling even further
behind”.
But renters
on Wednesday night issued their own warning that “lots of expensive market-rate
housing won’t bring housing costs down to affordable levels for the millions of
people trapped in poverty by sky-high rents”.
A manifesto
issued by eight tenants unions, Generation Rent, a campaign group, and the New
Economics Foundation thinktank called for more than three million new council
houses, tougher action against rogue landlords and rent controls, which are
opposed by Labour.
“Promises
to ramp up housebuilding will take many years to deliver and people stuck in
the private rented sector in the here and now urgently need proper protections
from unfair eviction, eye-watering rent rises and dangerous disrepair,” said
Conor O’Shea, a spokesperson for the renters groups.
The
interventions signal the dissatisfaction that builders and renters feel with
the government. This week, Michael Gove, the housing secretary, told the
Conservative party conference his party would not “build all over the green
belt and destroy precious natural habitats” and would instead “build in the
hearts of towns and cities and on brownfield land”.
But Baseley
said: “Developers are still too often hampered by a restrictive planning
system, an anti-development mindset and short-term politics trumping the needs
of communities. The country is in dire need of more high quality and energy
efficient new homes.”
The study
found the UK has the lowest number of homes built since 1980 of any of Spain,
France, Portugal, Greece, Romania, Bulgaria and Hungary.
Housebuilders
have faced attacks from environmentalists for lobbying successfully over
pollution of waterways and for delays to carbon-cutting standards. The HBF’s
call for the construction of an extra 100,000 homes annually is in line with
estimates by social housing providers and homelessness charities.
The
construction industry has been frustrated by the government’s stop-start
approach to planning reforms, as it has weighed the need for more building
against opposition from voters in Tory constituencies concerned about
over-development. The party lost the 2021 Chesham and Amersham byelection after
the Liberal Democrats focused on the government’s plan at the time to increase
housing targets in the south-east increasing pressure to build on the
countryside.
Meanwhile,
renters remain concerned no-fault evictions have still not been banned despite
the Conservative party pledging to do so in April 2019. Rents on new tenancies
went up 12% in the year to August, the highest level in at least nine years,
according to the estate agency Hamptons.
The
proportion of homes in England that fail to meet the government’s decent homes
standard was 15% in 2020, the HBF audit shows. By contrast the share of the
population living with leaking roofs, damp or rot in Poland was 6% and 12% in
Germany, figures from Eurostat show. By the same Europe-wide measure 18% of
homes in the UK were classed as having leaking roofs, damp or rot.
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