Posts with tag: labour housing policy

Hopeful Labour Leader Wants Right to Buy for Private Tenants

One Labour leadership contender would like to see the Right to Buy scheme extended to private tenants.

Hopeful Labour Leader Wants Right to Buy for Private Tenants

Hopeful Labour Leader Wants Right to Buy for Private Tenants

Islington MP Jeremy Corbyn says that abolishing the £14 billion tax breaks currently offered to buy-to-let landlords could fund a private rental sector Right to Buy. Private renters would have the right to purchase their rental properties at a discount.

Corbyn says: “We know that generation rent faces an uphill struggle simply to get into long-term housing.

“We have seen some good ideas from Labour to establish more secure tenancies for renters. Now we need to go further and think of new ways to get more people into secure housing.”

He believes that a Right to Buy for private tenants could help solve the housing crisis and he will launch a consultation on the policy this summer.

He continues: “I believe this idea could open up the possibility of real secure housing for many currently faced with insecurity and high rents.”1

Corbyn is not the first Labour MP to consider a private sector Right to Buy scheme.

In June, Ealing North MP Steve Pound spoke of the Government’s plans to extend Right to Buy to housing association tenants. He said that the “inevitable logic is to extend this to private tenants and see what private landlords have to say.”1

If Corbyn’s proposal was adopted, private landlords would lose tax breaks that are not applied to other businesses and could be required to sell their properties at a discount to tenants who have lived there for three years.

Meanwhile, Labour leadership contender Andy Burnham would like to offer powers to local councils that would allow them to issue compulsory purchase orders on private rental properties that do not meet a decent home standard.

Burnham has promised to make Labour the party of homeownership if it wins the next general election.

Another contender, Liz Kendall, has not yet made pledges on housing. Additionally, Yvette Cooper, the former housing minister, has not set out her plans.

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/labour-leadership-contender-wants-right-to-buy-for-private-tenants/

Britain Needs Bolder Housing Solutions, says Telegraph

Published On: March 4, 2015 at 2:26 pm

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Categories: Property News

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An article on The Telegraph online tells of their thoughts on the housing crisis, and how political parties are not working hard enough to solve it.

The Telegraph View piece says: “The Conservatives are right to prioritise housing, but they must go much further.”

They explain that in the past, increasing property prices were seen as completely positive. Now though, it is seen as pushing homeownership further away from the young.

“So David Cameron is right to identify the struggle of young people to buy a home as a major issue of concern at the general election and beyond,” the article reads. “His intention to increase the supply of affordable starter homes for first time buyers is likewise laudable.”

However, they go on to explain that Mr. Cameron’s “prescription is less convincing than his diagnosis.” The pledge to build 200,000 homes is praised, however Telegraph View believes there is “no certainty” that this will be carried through.

Britain Needs Bolder Housing Solutions, says Telegraph

Britain Needs Bolder Housing Solutions, says Telegraph

They explain that this scheme “rests on the hope that profit-making developers will sell homes well below their market value because they are exempted from some planning and building regulations.”

Offering their opinion, The Telegraph adds: “In truth, the only way any Government could guarantee such numbers would be to build the houses itself.”

Nevertheless, The Telegraph does say that the Conservative’s plans are “more convincing than Labour’s policy.” Of the opposition’s scheme, The Telegraph says that it “rests on an ominous threat to penalise developers deemed to be hoarding land.”

On all parties, the article says: “None of the political parties is offering to address the complex, deep-rooted causes of Britain’s property problems: a growing, ageing population whose members increasingly tend to live alone or in smaller households, rather than the extended families of old; the flow of international capital into Britain’s admirably open economy; and the concentration of power, money and people in south east England.

“The scale of the task in tackling Britain’s housing problems is great, but so are the rewards – social, economic and yes, political rewards.”

The article reveals that after two months of campaigning, “voters remain largely unmoved” in opinion polls. According to these statistics, “both the main parties are languishing well below the levels of support that would deliver a clear general election victory.”

The Telegraph gives their opinion on the main contenders: “While Ed Miliband’s Labour lacks the dynamism to escape this quagmire, the Conservatives can still do so with a more positive and detailed vision of the better Britain they would create with another term in office.”

Telegraph View then offers their advice for the Conservatives: “They should start on housing, promising to transfer millions of socially-owned homes to their tenants then tax any subsequent sale and use the proceeds to build more houses. Building the property-owning democracy that the Conservatives have rightly promised for almost a century requires radicalism, not tinkering.”1

With the general election just over two months away, housing is still an area of importance for most, if not all, voters.

1 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/telegraph-view/11445461/Britain-needs-boldness-not-tinkering.html