Saturday, January 11

Radical changes needed to boost homebuilding, experts warn

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have called on to radical changes to boost .

It follows the of yesterday (5 ), showing a decline in the homebuilding . The & Managers' revealed homebuilding dropped for the second month in a .

A by the for thinktank has also warned that the government was on to fall short of its 1.5 million for builds by the next general .

Gareth Belsham, of Bloom , said residential were still struggling with – which have increased the of buying land – as well as patchy from buyers.

“The government's to get 1.5 million more built in over the next five years is looking ever more pie in the sky,” he said. “With rising and demand , there's now a of in residential construction.”

Federation executive director Steve Turner told Construction that reform of was needed to boost starts.

“The government will need to pull additional levers if it is to achieve its ambitious housing target,” he said. “Ensuring local planning departments have sufficient to process efficiently is .”

Turner added that initiatives to improve affordability for new buyers were also needed.

“The government needs to do more to prospective buyers, in particular people, to access suitable mortgage ,” he said. 

“It is the first in 60 years there is no effective government support for home , and the suppressed level of demand reduces the industry's ability to in new and its chain, and so accelerate the delivery of private and affordable homes.”

Reacting to the release of the figures, Terry Woodley, MD of finance at Shawbrook , called for “comprehensive reform” of government policy to demand and supply.

“The decision not to extend stamp duty for first-time buyers could also hamper progress, given that they are the majority buyers of newly built homes,” he added.

“SME developers are going to play a crucial role in this [1.5 million] target, so it's important that the government lays out detailed and effective plans to remove tape, improve planning and encourage developers. Otherwise, the same issues currently stalling development risk dragging and halting any progress.”

Deputy minister Angela Rayner announced plans in July to consult on a raft of policies aimed at boosting building, including releasing some greenbelt land and intervening in planning at a local level.

But in its new report, the warns that the government's pledges on planning reform are insufficient for it to hit its homebuilding target.

Following an of data of private and housing delivery numbers,

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