I left TUC Congress early today to return to London for this morning's launch of the Housing Voice report at the House of Commons.
Housing Voice is an independent affordable housing alliance with cross party political support. For the past year they have carried out a national inquiry, taking evidence up and down the Country.
Over 60 organisations and 3000 individuals have given evidence. Today the report was published. I was there to make a response on behalf of UNISON. This is the press release and full report.
Housing Voice is an independent affordable housing alliance with cross party political support. For the past year they have carried out a national inquiry, taking evidence up and down the Country.
Over 60 organisations and 3000 individuals have given evidence. Today the report was published. I was there to make a response on behalf of UNISON. This is the press release and full report.
There was around 40 people present including MPs from all the main political parties. On the main panel was Liberal Democratic Stephen Gilbert MP (who said he was the only MP to be still living at home with his parents), Conservative Mark Pawsey MP and Labour Shadow Housing Minister, Jack Dromey MP.
Not everyone agreed with everything in the report but there was more consensus than I expected.
Not everyone agreed with everything in the report but there was more consensus than I expected.
There is lots and lots of good proposals but one of the big ideas is to use £5 billion of the recently announced £50 billion in Quantitative Easing (QE) to buy low interest housing bonds rather than government gilts. This money is then used to invest in affordable housing.
Supply and demand means that cost of housing in many parts of the UK is simply unaffordable. The only market solution to reduce cost is to build more new homes. The only social solution is to build more new homes with genuinely affordable rents.
Lord Larry Whitty introducedthe report by saying such is the crisis 250k new homes are needed each year for the next 20 years. Last year only 110k were built.
The problem is not planning permission, nor is it a land bank (supply) problem. With huge unemployment in constructionand development, capacity is not a blockage either. The problem is money.
Extra government support and QE can be used to provide that money, build affordable homes and get Britain working again. Get people off the dole and build homes, get them paying taxes and spending money in the economy.
Extra government support and QE can be used to provide that money, build affordable homes and get Britain working again. Get people off the dole and build homes, get them paying taxes and spending money in the economy.
The problem lies with many advisers and fund managers who think its all just "too difficult" and prefer investing in warehouses and retail because that is what they are use to. Unlike the rest of the world where pension schemes actively invest in residential property.
Appropriately the meeting stopped at 11.30 just after the Parliamentary bell rang for prayers. I'm not religious but I did have another bleeding obviousthought.
(I was pleased that afterwards Jack Dromey MP agreed to speak at a future meeting of my UNISON Housing Association branch). Check out Red Brick account of meeting here.
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