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UK government likely to miss annual housebuilding target by 50,000

by Sponsored Content
10th Jul 18 11:30 am

Knight Frank has released its annual Housebuilding report, which states that 86 per cent of housebuilders believe construction of 250,000 additional homes a year is the maximum achievable amount by 2022, falling short of the government’s 300,000 target.

Just 1 per cent of respondents, which include more than 100 developers that account for almost three quarters of all newly-built homes across the country each year, think surpassing 300,000 additional homes each year is possible by 2022.

The government is seeking methods to speed up delivery of housing via a review of build out rates currently being conducted by Sir Oliver Letwin, who this week published draft analysis stating absorption rates are the key factor limiting the speed of housebuilding in the country. Though the Letwin review focusses on challenges after the planning process is complete, when asked about the barriers to speeding up development our respondents still identified planning as the biggest hurdle, with 39 per cent identifying it as the top issue, although the proportion identifying the planning system as a hurdle has fallen since last year.

Looking ahead, 61 per cent plan to increase the number of homes they build during the next 12 months, but that headline figure hides a split between the outlook of larger housebuilders and SMEs. 92 per cent of large housebuilders (those that build over 1000 homes per year) plan to increase construction starts this year, however most small developers (57 per cent) intend to decrease activity or leave output unchanged.

The future of the Help to Buy Equity Loan Scheme has become a topic of keen interest to housebuilders, many of whom are now embarking on building projects that will complete after 2021, when the scheme is scheduled to end. Nearly half of respondents (46 per cent) said that ending the Help to Buy scheme in 2021 would have a negative impact on the supply of homes they were able to deliver.

However, concerns that ending the Help to Buy Equity Loan scheme will affect housing delivery does not translate into a plea for Help to Buy to continue indefinitely. Two-thirds said the scheme should end, although these were split between those who called for a tapered withdrawal of the scheme (50 per cent) and those who said it should end completely at some point in 2021 (14 per cent). Just over a third of all respondents (36 per cent) said that the scheme should continue indefinitely.

Justin Gaze, Head of Residential Development Land at Knight Frank commented on the future of Help to Buy,Whatever ministers decide, they must speak up soon if they are to avoid weighing on the supply of homes. The industry has shown itself capable of adapting to change, but businesses in every sector strain to operate amid policy uncertainty.”

The majority of respondents to the survey (55 per cent) said that London Mayor Sadiq Khan’s Affordable Homes threshold of 35 per cent could, if applied on a national basis, hinder the delivery of Affordable Homes, suggesting that any threshold would need to be set locally. However, most respondents (62 per cent) actually favoured a threshold approach to Affordable Housing, provided the target was set clearly and adhered to, due to its transparency and the likelihood it would make bidding for land more competitive.

When asked for opinions on Brexit, the majority said that that an uncertain economy was the greatest risk to their business, followed by labour availability and access to materials.

Respondents said outer London zones 3-6, the South East and the West Midlands present the greatest opportunities during the next three years.

David Fenton, Head of Regional Land at KnightFrank commented,Nationwide, housebuilding looks set to increase, underpinned by more evenly distributed house price growth and high levels of employment in regional cities. However, our survey indicates that scepticism prevails among housebuilders over whether it’s possible to deliver 300,000 additional homes a year, and ultimately they will only build what they can sell.

“As our respondents have identified in the survey, the market is not without its challenges, and continued policy uncertainty has the potential to weigh on output in the coming years.”

The Housebuilding report examines the opportunities and challenges ahead for the development sector. The report reflects the views of respondents from more than 100 housebuilders and developers, ranging from FTSE 100 companies to firms building fewer than 10 homes a year. Together, the respondents account for almost 75% of all homes built across the country each year.

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