MP’s have condemned  as “deplorable” the “cycle of policy invention, abandonment and reinvention, stringing expectant young people along for years”, “wasting time and resources” on housing policies that “come to nothing as ministers come and go with alarming frequency”.

The Public Accounts Committee report on Starter Homes found that The Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government (MHCLG) has failed to deliver the 200,000 discounted Starter Homes it promised first-time buyers in 2015.

Despite setting out the legislative framework for Starter Homes in 2016, the Department has never put in place the necessary laws to make the affordable homes initiative a reality.

The PAC has reported regularly on housing delivery since 2015, and not one of the promised housing programmes has delivered its objectives.

By 2017, Starter Homes as a distinct policy had been abandoned, although it was not until 2020 that the Department formally announced the end of the policy. Some 85,000 people had registered their interest in Starter Homes since 2015, only to hear in 2020 that they had been waiting in vain.

MHCLG is now introducing a new policy with similar aims – First Homes – but is unable to say when they will be available for first-time buyers to purchase. Its reliance on developer contributions to fund First Homes is part of an opaque, complex mechanism which risks less money being available to local authorities for housing and infrastructure.

After this string of abandoned policies and wasted resources, MHCLG remains unable or unwilling to clarify how it will achieve its ambition of 300,000 new homes per year by the mid-2020s. There is an alarming “blurring” of the definition of affordable housing: it is essential that the Department is clear what ‘affordable’ means to different sectors of society and in different areas of the country. The long-term success of MHCLG’s housing policies depends on it working effectively with players across the housing sector, without losing sight of the needs of those who are unlikely to be able to buy or rent a home in the UK property market without support.

Meg Hillier MP, Chair of the Public Accounts Committee, said:

“The Department for ‘Housing’ is at risk of losing the right to the title. It has serially, constantly failed to deliver affordable new homes or even make a serious attempt to execute its own housing policies or achieve targets before they are ditched, unannounced – costs sunk and outcomes unknown.

“MHCLG needs to ditch instead the false promises and set out clear, staged, funded plans, backed by the necessary laws and with a realistic prospect of delivering.

“It also needs to ditch what is becoming a hallmark lack of transparency, if it is to have any hope of rebuilding confidence among future tenants and owners that the decent, safe, affordable homes they want and need will ever be built.”

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here