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Explore the changing landscape of social housing in England post-GFC, focusing on affordability, policy priorities, and the role of housing associations. Learn about recent policy measures and potential solutions to the housing crisis.
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Social housing in England after the GFC:affordable vs ‘affordable’ Kath Scanlon LSE London RESHAPE final conference Bolzano 19 April 2017
Themes • England’s ‘housing crisis’ • Changing nature of social landlords • Marginalisation of social housing and growth of ‘affordable’ – but not social -- products
Built form • Reflects sector’s history—municipal construction boom in 1960s/70s, including many high-rise or deck-access monotenure estates • Current practice is to provide mix (social/tenure/income) in new build • Many existing estates have become mixed through RTB—but not all
Has public perception caught up? 1960s estate, Wapping, East London
Social landlords • Two types: local authorities (historically the main providers) and housing associations (now more important) • Councils have always operated under strong government constraints • Housing associations in principle private non-profit (often charitable) organisations
Control vs freedom • Government increases constraints on housing associations’ social-sector activities • 2015: requires associations to reduce rents for 4 years • 2016: Extension of right to buy But • Great freedom outside the social sector
Increasing commercial focus • Largest associations focus on areas where government exercises less control • Consolidations and mergers create some very big players, who compete directly with major house builders in private sale market • Genesis (32,000 homes): will no longer build new social housing
England’s ‘housing crisis’ • Generally shorthand for affordability problems in private housing markets • Focus on • difficulties of would-be first-time buyers • high rents and insecurity of tenure in the private rented sector • Largely a London problem
Current policy priorities • stimulate housing construction so as to dampen price increases, • help first-time buyers purchase new homes and • increase provision of ‘affordable’ housing. • Social housing is seen as irrelevant for working families needing a home in higher-cost areas.
Policy case study: The Housing and Planning Act 2016 Social housing measures: • increase targeting • enable more social tenants to buy • reduce stock in expensive areas and increase in cheaper neighbourhoods • Introduce new affordable but not social products—e.g., Starter Homes A collection of policy ideas rather than worked-out rules
Idea 1: Give housing association tenants the right to buy • Would give housing association tenants same right to buy their homes as council tenants • HAs crafted ‘voluntary’ agreement to protect status as private organisations • Government compensates them for discount using…
Idea 2: Make councils sell high-value homes • Councils sell ‘high-value’ homes as they become vacant • Transfer £ to government, who uses it to compensate housing associations • What is ‘high value’?
Idea 3: Make higher-income social tenants pay more rent • Historically social rents in England not income-dependent (unlike in many countries) • ‘pay to stay’—rent would increase for higher-income tenants
Idea 4: Require councils to use fixed-term leases • Social leases generally indefinite, in contrast to very limited security of tenure in PRS • Eligibility assessed on arrival but not after • Idea: councils to use fixed-term leases for all new tenancies
Social vs affordable • ‘Affordable’ products/schemes include • Discounted Market Rent • Affordable Rent • London Living Rent • Help to Buy • Shared ownership • Starter Homes Etc etc etc
Conclusions… • Housing systems are highly path dependent and can be hard to change--especially when there is no consensus about the need for change • Given long-term ↓ in subsidy, less reason for housing associations to remain onside. Many now want to fulfil their social aims in other, less regulated sectors of the housing market
…and questions • Will social housing strictly defined retain its relevance for broader housing issues? • Is the traditional housing-tenure split (o-o, social, PRS) still a useful analytical tool, or should we look more at submarket options in the round?