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The New Economics Foundation has just produced a paper:
WHAT LIES BENEATH
HOW TO FIX THE BROKEN LAND SYSTEM AT THE HEART OF OUR HOUSING CRISIS
High rents. Evictions and insecure tenancies. Millions of families priced out of home ownership. Over a million households on the waiting list for social housing. The effects of our broken housing system are all too obvious.
What is less obvious, but no less broken, is the market which sits beneath the housing market, and drives many of the worst aspects of it. When we talk about high rents, or high house prices, in many ways what we are really talking about is the unaffordability of land.
This problem of unaffordable land is at the heart of the housing crisis. Any solution to the housing crisis will never succeed unless it takes major steps to address our broken land system.
This briefing reveals new research that shows how excessive land prices, driven by speculation, are making a significant contribution to the housing crisis, and putting up significant barriers to any attempts to solve it.
It shows how the housing crisis is most severe in places with high land prices: rents eat up a massive chunk of people’s income, and the numbers of homeless people housed in temporary accommodation dwarfs other areas, hitting the poorest most severely. It also shows how these same high land prices systematically stymie attempts to redress the housing crisis, so that the building of affordable homes has plummeted in exactly those places which need them most: those with the highest cost of land.
The research reveals:
- In places with high land prices average rents swallow up to three quarters of ordinary households’ pre-tax income, compared to 20% in places with low land values.
- High land price areas are the hotspots of homelessness. The top 10% of local authorities in terms of land values account for 73% of households in temporary accommodation.
- The top 10% of local authorities in terms of land prices experienced a 70% drop in the numbers of new affordable/social rent homes between 2011/12 and 2014/15. This compares to a drop of 20% in the rest of England.
A supply of affordable land is crucial to affordable housebuilding, but landowners get to set the price of land at levels which make increasing the supply of affordable homes extremely challenging. Up and down the country communities are paying the price for the enormous amount of power that these landowners have. It is landowners – whose price-setting power earns them billions of pounds in windfall gains – who determine what gets built for communities in their area, and not the other way round. This briefing contains the tools needed to reverse this.
The report contains five key recommendations, the most essential of which is an end to the present public land sale, in which public land – often in places with high land values – is being sold to the highest bidder. Our research shows the programme is only delivering 20% affordable homes, and 6% social rent on former public land. Instead of being sold off, public land should be put to the service of long-term public good. It should form the basis for a People’s Land Bank, to be used strategically in partnership with communities to meet their needs for affordable housing, and supplemented by private sector land bought at a fairer price (existing use value), which enables the benefits of land value to be shared.
The other recommendations are as follows:
- Following Scotland, establish an English Land Commission to identify policies needed for a more equitable distribution of land, and land values, and a fairer land system.
- Close the viability loophole which enables developers to evade affordable housebuilding, and use the planning system to deliver more affordable housing.
- Implement taxation mechanisms to redistribute unfair gains which accrue to landowners through public investment and land value increases.
- Increase non-private ownership of land through collective democratic ownership. This could take the form of public or community ownership models.
Read the full report below.
What lies beneath | New Economics Foundation
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