UK ‘needs to build out of credit crunch’

Tuesday 24th February 2009, 9:44PM GMT.

UK 'needs to build out of credit crunch'A group of influential MPs are calling on the government maintain its building programme through the recession.

A report from the Communities and Local Government select committee is calling for the government to stick by its building targets of a total of three million new homes to be built by 2020, with two million of them by 2016.

The credit crisis, however, has halted building in the UK – with only 16,310 homes started in the last three months of 2008 – as the mortgage crunch and falling house prices means developers are not seeing buyers for new properties.

To reach the target, a total of 240,000 new homes per year are needed to be built.

The select committee is pushing the government to ensure more social housing is included in new building.

Phyllis Starkey, chair of the committee, said: “The credit crunch has not reduced the numbers of households needing new housing, nor does it affect the need to address years of undersupply.

“The message which we received from witnesses during our inquiry was clear: the steps the government is taking are welcome, but further action is needed if the government is to have a chance of meeting its targets for home building and achieving the goal of a decent home for all.”

The report also raised problems over rolling forward spending from future budgets “with apparently no idea how it is going to restore that money at a later date”.

In response the committee is urging the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) pressure the Treasury to bring forward measures to restart the mortgage market, and greater purchase of existing homes as social housing.

The MPs are also calling on greater monitoring of repossessions and lenders’ behaviour.

James Rowlands, at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics), said low levels of housebuilding needed to be dealt with alongside boosting mortgage lending.

“Current market conditions mean that the number of homes being built has fallen dramatically, as housebuilders are reluctant to develop if homes will not sell,” he said.

“As a result, it is likely that the number of homes built in 2009 will be significantly below 80,000, well short of the government’s target of 240,000.

“With private housebuilders reluctant to develop the government must be looking to use the Homes and Communities Agency and housing associations to make up some of the shortfall.”



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