Home ownership schemes help get Britain building
16 May 2014 02:30 PM
New figures demonstrate
how government efforts to help aspiring homeowners onto the property ladder are
getting Britain building.
House building is a key part of
the government’s long-term economic plan. There were 36,450 new homes
started in the 3 months to March – 11% higher than the previous quarter
and a third higher than the same period last year, with house building by
councils now at a 23-year high.
Private house building has
increased by 34% since the launch of the Help to Buy
scheme in April 2013.
And overall, housing starts are
now 113% higher than in 2009 and the end of the unsustainable housing boom, and
at its highest level since 2007.
Help onto the housing
ladder
Over 27,000 people have been
helped through the Help to Buy equity loan, NewBuy and Mortgage Guarantee
schemes.
Since the discounts were
increased in April 2012, local authority Right to Buy sales have quadrupled
from 2,638 in 2011 to 2012 to 11,238 in 2013 to 2014.
Taken together with sales to
housing association tenants, this takes the total to over 19,500 since the
launch of the reinvigorated Right to Buy.
Revenues from additional Right
to Buy sales are being recycled into building new affordable homes to rent and
in the 3 months to March, work started on 906 homes using this funding –
bringing the annual total to over 2,100, more than double the number started
last year.
Overall, councils built 1,090
council homes in the 3 months to March, the highest quarterly total since
1991.
This is on top of the
government’s affordable homes programme, which has already delivered
170,000 new homes since 2010, with a further £23 billion public and
private investment planned for the 3 years from 2015.
Communities Secretary Eric
Pickles said:
In 2010 we inherited a situation
where builders couldn’t build, buyers couldn’t buy and lenders
wouldn’t lend.
Today’s figures show
we’re turning this around, with Help to Buy not only helping aspiring
homeowners but also leading to a resurgence in house building.
Thanks to this and the
reinvigorated Right to Buy, we’re ensuring anyone who works hard and
wants to get on the property ladder will be able to do so.
Housing Minister Kris Hopkins
said:
The end of the unsustainable
housing boom devastated our construction industry, leading to the loss of a
quarter of a million construction jobs.
It’s taking a massive
government effort to get Britain building again and today’s figures show
it’s working – in no small part thanks to the measures we’ve
taken to help aspiring homeowners onto the property ladder.
Since the launch of Help to Buy,
private house building is up 34%. And thanks to the reinvigorated Right to Buy
even more tenants are able to become homeowners, while council house building
has hit a 23-year high.
Stewart Baseley, executive
chairman at the Home Builders Federation, said:
The Help to Buy Equity Loan
scheme has supported demand for new build homes. House builders responded
immediately, and we have now seen a big increase in the number of homes being
built.
This is providing desperately
needed homes and also creating jobs on sites across the country and in the
supply chain. Whilst the number of Equity Loan scheme sales is very small in
terms of the overall housing market, it is driving up new housing
supply.
The scheme’s extension
provides certainty about longer-term demand for new homes. This is allowing the
industry to plan ahead, rebuild capacity lost in the downturn and deliver the
homes the country needs.
Further
information
View house building figures for
the March 2014
quarter.
View Right to Buy sales figures
for the March 2014 quarter.
Kris Hopkins has recently
outlined the range of government schemes working to get Britain
building in Parliament.
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