More than half of the people living in private rented
accommodation say they are struggling to pay for it, according to a YouGov poll
on behalf of Shelter which shows that 53% were finding it hard to pay their
rent, and a further 3% were falling behind on payments. The survey reveals that
15% of private renters are worried about paying their rent this month and that
nearly a third, 32%, have had to cut back on winter essentials such as heating
or clothing to meet their financial obligations.
The figures highlight the extent to which the housing crisis
is gripping the private rental sector. Unable to afford homes of their own,
tenants are being hit by rising rents as landlords take advantage of the acute
shortage of housing. The number of households in private rented accommodation
is now similar to that seen in the 1960s, when England’s housing crisis
triggered a furore that led to Shelter’s creation. The charity marks its 50th
anniversary this year, amid concerns that high rents are pricing key workers
out of inner cities and that accommodation for families who have to rent is
increasingly inadequate. Some 10% of households were renting privately in 1991,
compared with almost 20% now. Last year, the number of households in England in
private rented accommodation rose to 4.4 million, a fraction below the 4.5
million high at the start of the 1960s.
Shelter chief executive Campbell Robb said many of the
issues Shelter sought to address half a century ago persist.
“Thankfully, the slums of 1966 are gone, but sadly, despite
the progress we’ve made over the years, a housing crisis is once again gripping
this country,” said Robb. “Fewer houses are being built, tens of thousands of
families are living in temporary accommodation, house prices continue to rise,
pushing more people into private renting, and conditions in many rented homes
are as bad as we’ve seen in decades. These are just some of the consequences of
failure by successive governments to address the root cause of these problems
by building more genuinely affordable homes and providing adequate support for
those who fall on hard times.”
Shelter estimates that 250,000 homes a year, half of them
“affordable”, need to be built in England if the crisis is to be addressed.
However, latest figures show there were only 135,050 new homes over the past
year, a rise of 17%, but still little more than half what is needed. England’s
house-building programme peaked in 1968, when 352,540 homes were built, and reached
its nadir in 2010, with just 106,720. The construction of social housing has
declined hugely. It reached a peak in 1993, when 57,020 homes for social rent
were built, but had fallen to 9,590 by the last financial year.
Figures released last week suggest that the number of
tenants in serious arrears is rising. There were 84,200 tenants more than two
months behind with their rent in the third quarter of 2015, the latest figures
available, compared with 74,000 in the second quarter. Figures highlighted last
week by the Resolution Foundation show that one in four people renting
privately in London spend more than half their income on rent.
The use of bed and breakfast accommodation for homeless
families with children is rising. Over the past five years, the number of
households living in B&Bs has more than doubled, from 2,050 to 5,270.
Meanwhile, the number of homeless households in temporary accommodation has
risen by 26% over five years, from 51,350 in 2010 to 64,710 in 2015.
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