
Back on the Blog after the longest break I’ve had in two years and a record number of weddings attended!! With schools opening up this week, I don’t know about you, but I’ll be glad to see the back end of the kids. Whilst away I have received numerous email requests to discuss various topics of interest by my readers. I picked the one requested most but I promise to try and get around addressing them all over the coming weeks.
Housing has always been the Cinderella issue at General Elections. Policing, NHS, Education, Tax and Pensions etc., are always headline grabbing stuff and always seem to go to ‘the ball’. However, housing, which affects all our lives, always seems to get left behind and forgotten.
Nonetheless, the way the politicians act on housing can have a fundamental effect on the wellbeing of the UK plc and the nation as a whole.
One policy that comes to mind is Margaret Thatcher’s introduction of the ‘Right to Buy’ scheme in the 1980’s, when around 1.4m Council Houses went from public ownership to private ownership. It was a great vote winner at the time (it helped her win three General Elections in a row) but it has meant the current generation of 20 somethings in Walsall (and elsewhere in the Country) don’t have that option of going into a council house. This has been a huge contributing factor in the rise of the private renting and buy to let sector in Walsall over the last 15 years.
Nevertheless, looking back to the start of the Millennium, Labour set the national target for new house building at 200,000 new homes a year (and at one point that increased to 240,000 under Gordon Brown for a couple of years). In terms of what was actually built, the figures did rise in the mid Noughties from 186,000 properties built in 2004 to an impressive 224,000 in 2007 (the highest since the early 1980’s) as the economy grew.
Then the Credit Crunch hit. It is interesting, that the 2010 Cameron/Clegg government did things a little differently. The fallout of the Credit Crunch meant a lot less homes were built, so instead of tackling that head on, the coalition side-stepped a target of number of new homes to build and offered a £400m fund to help kick start the housing market (a figure that was a drop in the ocean when you consider an average UK property was worth around £230,000 in 2010). The number of new houses being completed dipped from 146,800 in 2011 to 135,500 the subsequent year.
So, one might ask exactly how many new homes do we need to build per year? It is commonly accepted that not enough new properties are being built to meet the rising need for homes to live in. A report by the Government in 2016, showed that on average 210,000 net additional households will be formed each year) up to 2039 (through increased birth rates, immigration, people living longer, lifestyle (i.e. divorce) and people living by themselves more than 30 years ago). In 2016, only 140,600 homes were built… simply not enough!
Looking at the numbers for Walsall and the surrounding area, it is obvious to me, that we as an area are not pulling our weight either when it comes to building and completing new homes. In the 12 months up to the end of Q2 2017, only 540 properties were built in the Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council area (this includes all tenure i.e. private and social enterprise). Go back to 2007, that figure was 600, 10 years before that in 1997, 680 new homes and further back to 1987, 620 new homes were built.
Who knows if Teresa May’s Government will last the five years? She will think she has bigger fish to fry with Brexit to get bogged down with housing issues. But let me leave you with one final thought.
The conceivable rewards in providing a place to live for the public on a massive house building programme can be enormous, as previous Tory PM’s have found out. Winston Churchill in 1951, asked his Minister for Housing (Harold Macmillan) if he could guarantee the construction of 300,000 new properties a year, he was notoriously told: “It is a gamble—it will make or mar your political career, but every humble home will bless your name if you succeed.”
Isn’t it interesting, that the Tories remained in power until 1964! Mrs May will have to work out if she wants to be the heiress to Harold Macmillan or David Cameron?
Want to discuss the Walsall property market? Call me, email me or let’s meet up for a coffee.
01922 311016
My roots are in Walsall, in Rushall. But, I’ve not visited for many many years. It’s a place that I find to have very little that is attractive at all!
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Thanks for your comment. If you haven’t been to Walsall in recent years I would highly recommend coming to see us. When you do…give us a shout for a pie & a pint.
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