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Housing and Planning in Northern Ireland Presentation to Conference of the Housing Studies Association, Belfast 9-10 th September 2004 Stanley McGreal Jim Berry House Price Trends 1985 - 1994 increase in nominal house price no significant increase in real terms
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Housing and Planning in Northern Ireland Presentation to Conference of the Housing Studies Association, Belfast 9-10th September 2004 Stanley McGreal Jim Berry
1985 - 1994 • increasein nominal house price • no significant increase in real terms • N.I. low cost housing market • avoided market downturn of early 1990s 1995 - 2003: • rapid growth in nominal and real terms • key factors - growth in income levels - declining unemployment - interest rates - political situation - national UK trends - spillover effects of Celtic tiger Northern Ireland Private Housing Market Long Term Trends
Affordability Concerns • sustained and high levels of house price growth since the mid 1990s • house prices have risen more rapidly than incomes leading to an earnings gap • significant increase in house price to income ratio and convergence between NI and rest of UK • effects of higher house prices ameliorated by low interest rates and competitive mortgage market • concerns relate to those on the margins of home-ownership and the single-income first-time buyer • regulatory role of the planning system in influencing supply-side • high land value encourages development to be focused away from the first-time buyer to the middle/upper market sectors
Affordability in the Northern Ireland Housing Market: 2001 Report • the nature and extent of affordability problems in Northern Ireland bore little relation to some other parts of the UK • affordability not seen as major problem affecting the market • recognised that first-buyers faced increasing difficulties • affordability issues were localised on particular areas • not an immediate need for affordability to become a major driver of housing strategies in NI • recommended that affordability issues be monitored with the flexibility to adjust policies
Comparative Experience in England and Republic of Ireland • problem of developing robust and objective measures • reservations regarding methodology used • concerns about data and adequacy for the purpose • analysis often not sufficiently robust to support detailed targets • local authorities and developers often critical of housing needs surveys, the assumptions and approaches to assess the need for affordable housing
Lessons from Experience • should not set out to develop an overly-sophisticated approach • method should be governed by data availability, robustness, simplicity of application and repeatability • should focus upon affordability change over time • key factors identified as being the inter-play between interest rate, incomes and house prices
Building a Model for Northern Ireland • faced with same difficulties in relation to data in relation to income and house price data • for income data – several sources but structured on different basis and restricted coverage for the purposes of this model • Family Expenditure Survey • Continuous Household Survey • New Earnings Survey • Labour Force Survey • House Condition Survey • for the model developed used survey data from the House Condition Survey
Building a Model for Northern Ireland • for house price data – several sources but structured on different basis and restricted coverage for the purposes of this model • Halifax • Nationwide • Council of Mortgage Lenders • DSD • NHBC • Northern Ireland Quarterly House Price Index • for the model developed used survey data from the Northern Ireland Quarterly House Price Index
Characteristics of the Model for Northern Ireland • developed on a district council basis – spatial patterns • developed for different years - change through time • gross household income – median income • utilise the first quartile of house prices as an affordability threshold • use an annuity formula to determine size of loan and from this an affordable price threshold
Inputs into the Model • mortgage rate • term of mortgage – assumed 25 years • maximum percentage of gross household income that may be considered affordable – initially set at 30% • loan to value ratio - set at 95%
Affordability Model : Belfast • 2001 median income £12,500 affordable price £52,288 price at q1 £61,950 affordability gap -£9,662 percentage affordable 15% • 2003 median income £14,750 affordable price £61,700 price at q1 £69,950 affordability gap -£8,250 percentage affordable 16%
Affordability Model : North Down • 2001 median income £17,500 affordable price £73,203 price at q1 £71,000 affordability gap +£2,203 percentage affordable 28% • 2003 median income £20,650 affordable price £86,380 price at q1 £80,000 affordability gap +£6,380 percentage affordable 32%
Affordability Model :Castlereagh • 2001 median income £17,500 affordable price £73,203 price at q1 £77,000 affordability gap -£3,797 percentage affordable 23% • 2003 median income £20,650 affordable price £86,380 price at q1 £95,000 affordability gap -£8,620 percentage affordable 17%
Affordability Model • produces a working model • flexible regarding input sources and changes to inputs • sensitivity of variables can be tested • focus upon change over time • the analysis indicates that affordability issues are variable by market area
Barker Review 2004 Review of Housing Supply: Delivering Stability: Securing our Future Housing Needs (March 2004) To achieve: • improvements in housing affordability in the market sector in the UK • a more stable housing market • location of housing supply which supports patterns of economic development • an adequate supply of publicly-funded housing for those who need it
Barker Review 2004 Planning for housing development • Increasing supply side • Making better use of information about prices and preferences in planning decision making • Facilitating process through greater speed and certainty • Allocating more land for development based on market affordability targets, strategic growth areas, transport corridors
Barker Review 2004 Delivering housing development • Right package of incentives to facilitate supply • Reforms to local government finance • Sustainability of physical and social infrastructure • Land assembly, land servicing and infrastructure provision • Coordination between planning & infrastructure providers • More strategic view of area based special purpose vehicles • Use of fiscal incentives
RDS:Meeting Housing Need Core principles underpinning housing policy in RDS 2025 • widening opportunity and choice • Improving the supply and quality of housing • Promoting sustainable development
RDS:Meeting Housing Need Balanced and integrated development • Integrating housing with economic development, services, transport, and the local environment • Achieving a balanced spread of housing across the region and a high degree of integration with the RSTN of road and rail corridors • Promoting a greater sense of community with a focus on place, the value of the individual and high quality living environments
RDS:Meeting Housing Need Key Housing Themes in RDS • Managing housing growth and distribution • Supporting urban renaissance • Achieving balanced communities
Managing Housing Growth and Distribution • Providing for a balanced supply of land throughout the region based on a robust and flexible approach to meeting future housing need • Setting housing growth indicators to guide the distribution of housing in the Region to 2015 • Allocating housing growth to the main and small towns within context of the SDS by defining housing allocations in development plan Plan, Monitor & Manage mechanism Periodic releases of development land Over-zoning of 10% as contingency
RDS Projections 2015 • Population Growth of 105,000 • Need for 160,000 additional dwellings (250,000 by 2025) • Over 60% of new households will be 1-2 persons • Economic growth will necessitate 100,000 new jobs
Supporting Urban Renaissance • Promoting 60% of new housing on brownfield sites • Encouraging compact urban form • Increasing density of urban housing appropriate in scale and design • Sequential approach • Quality Residential Environments (PPS 7)
Achieving Balanced Communities • Developing community cohesion • Providing housing choice • Promoting home ownership and affordable housing • Providing social housing to meet identifiable needs • Requiring an appropriate provision in larger developments • Mix of housing tenures and house types
Planning Policy DRD is preparing • PPS 12 Housing in Settlements (Autumn 2004) • PPS 14 Development in the Countryside (Issues Paper)
PPS 12 : Housing in Settlements (Draft) Housing Land Requirements • Housing Growth Indicators • Urban Capacity Studies • Sequential Approach • Plan, Monitor and Manage • Windfall Sites • Local CharacterAssessment
Regional Housing Need Review: Timetable As part of the first 5 year review, DRD in conjunction with NISRA is reviewing the regional figures • Ministerial Statement in the Autumn 2004 • Period of consultation early 2005
Regional Housing Need Review: Key Issues • Ensuring an adequate supply of land • Meeting the full range of housing need • Continuing pressure for housing in the open countryside • Meeting the needs of rural communities • Applying a one-fit-all v flexible approach to meeting uplift • Differing needs at sub-regional level • Balanced communities & mixed use development • Buy-in by government departments