According to new estimates from the Local Government
Association (LGA), 66,000 council homes in England will be sold to tenants
under the Government’s Right to Buy scheme. Because local councils only receive
one third of the cash from Right to Buy purchases, they will not have the money
to replace the lost social housing, the LGA said. In fact, council finances are
in such a dire state that they will be forced to sell a further 22,000 council
properties – a forecast of 88,000 homes to be lost by end of decade. The number
of council houses has dropped from 5million in 1981 to 1.7million in 2014. More
and more people are being driven into the private rental centre, leading to a
£210m increase in the housing benefit bill.
The independent Chartered Institute of Housing (CIH) also
voiced concern that measures in the new Housing and Planning Bill, which is
currently being debated by the House of Lords, would make it “very difficult”
for councils to build homes and warned that its own research indicated that
extending Right to Buy to housing associations could lead to the loss of an
additional 7,000 council homes a year which may not be replaced.
The Right to Buy scheme helps council and housing
association tenants in England buy their home with a discount of up to
£103,900, or £77,900 outside London. The policy hits council budgets for
house-building, which will also be affected by a proposed £2.2bn reduction in
social housing rents. The LGA is calling for 100 per cent of the receipts from
Right to Buy sale to go to councils. Currently, they only get one third, with
much of the remainder going to the Treasury.
The Government pledged to build 200,000 starter homes for
people entering the property market, but the LGA’s housing spokesman, said
ministers needed to recognise that “not everyone can afford to buy”. He said “With 68,000 people currently living in
temporary accommodation, annual homelessness spending of at least £330 million
and more than a million more on council waiting lists, it is clear that only an
increase of all types of housing – including those for affordable or social rent
– will solve our housing crisis. This loss of social rented housing risks
pushing more families into the private rented sector, driving up housing
benefit spending and rents and making it more difficult for families to save
the deposit needed for their first house.” Discounts offered to buyers of the
200,000 starter homes have a knock-on effect on the social housing sector, LGA
experts said, because it is funded by allowing developers off the hook on their
obligations to fund affordable housing. Research by Savills estate agents has
shown that the average first time buyer now requires a deposit more than double
their annual income to get onto the housing ladder.
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