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Affordable Housing that is fit for the future

12 Apr 2022 By Jack Burnham, Head of Affordable Housing

Pressure is building for the UK to deliver significantly more affordable housing in the face of rising living costs and fuel poverty. Carbon reduction rules on new and existing homes, an ageing population, and demands set by the government’s levelling-up agenda are all adding to the challenge. Increasingly, housing associations and local authorities are looking for new investment partners and financial models to help them fund affordable homes that are fit for the future. For many, the cost-of-living nightmare is worsening. Inflation is rampant, with the consumer price index rising 6.2% in the year to February 2022, the fastest rate of increase for 30 years. Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s Spring Statement forecasts average inflation will hit 7.4% this year.

Sunak did deliver some help to low-income families, but was it enough? He raised the National Insurance threshold, cut fuel duty by 5p (but only for one year) and signalled a cut in the basic rate of income tax from 20% to 19% (from April 2024). However, he didn’t cut tax on energy bills. Recognition of the impact the higher cost of living is having saw Sunak double (to £1 billion) the Household Support Fund that local councils use to help the most vulnerable. Nevertheless, concern is growing that more needs to be done. The Chartered Institute of Housing expressed its disappointment that Sunak’s statement didn’t do enough to bridge the gap between what low-income households have and what they need. And it described the increase to the Household Support Fund as a “sticking plaster” rather than a solution to support low-income families.

With inflation outpacing earnings, the Office for Budget Responsibility believes real living standards will fall by 2.2% in 2022-23. That would be the largest annual fall on record. As living costs accelerate faster than wages, the need for affordable housing has never been more pressing. More people are being priced out of the open market for both rental and home ownership, but viable alternatives are in short supply. Until the UK builds more new homes, house prices will keep rising. So, it was disappointing that the government reported falls in both the number of affordable homes started or completed in 2020 –2021 compared with the previous year.

Tackling fuel poverty

Rising inflation and escalating energy prices, in particular, have a greater impact on lower-income families and retired people, forcing them to spend more on day-to-day essentials, especially food and heating.

Although the government’s Energy Bills Rebate, announced in February 2022, aims to soften the blow of higher energy prices, the package of rebates and discounts only goes so far. More needs to be done to tackle long-term fuel poverty by focusing on reducing energy usage in affordable homes, and radically increasing the amount of on-site generation and use of microgrids where possible.

Building greener homes

Energy bills are rising at a time when the world is also targeting net zero carbon emissions. The days of relatively cheap fossil fuels are numbered. The UK must meet renewed commitments made at last year’s COP26 Climate Change Conference in Glasgow. One way this will be done is through the new building regulations, introduced in December 2021, that include the requirement for new homes to produce about 30% less carbon dioxide. To support this change in the rules, the government’s housing and regeneration agency, Homes England, is offering £175 million in green loans to enable small and medium-sized housebuilders to build more high quality, energy-efficient homes.

Building safer homes

Another cost factor facing housing associations and local authorities is the expense of meeting higher safety standards. This applies not only to new-build properties but also to the retrospective step of removing unsafe cladding from buildings following the Grenfell Tower fire.

The government will fully fund the cost of replacing unsafe cladding for all leaseholders in residential buildings of six storeys or higher. Certain buildings below this height can apply for low-interest, government-backed financing to remove dangerous cladding, but there will be cases where costs must be borne by landlords and leaseholders.

Meeting the levelling-up agenda

With the publication of the government’s Levelling Up the United Kingdom white paper in February 2022, we now have a new ‘road map’ that will determine the direction affordable housing takes.

The goal of levelling up should be to narrow the divergence seen across the country in areas such as health, education, and public service provision. For the housing sector, one of the levelling-up goals for 2030 is to give renters a secure path to ownership and to halve the number of “non-decent” rented homes in the UK.

Supporting an ageing population

Affordable housing must also meet the needs of the elderly. In its Housing an Ageing Population briefing paper published in September 2021, the government noted that 19% of the UK’s population was aged 65 or over in 2019 and that this would rise to 24% by 2043. However, the government admits to an absence of a national strategy on housing for elderly people within England to provide a strategic vision to ensure housing, health, and social-care policies are aligned.

SOURCES:

Consumer price inflation, UK – Office for National Statistics

Economic and fiscal outlook (obr.uk)

CIH responds to Chancellor’s Spring Statement – Chartered Institute of Housing

Economics and fiscal outlook report, March 2022 (igd.com)

Affordable housing supply in England: 2020 to 2021 (publishing.service.gov.uk)

Millions to receive £350 boost to help with rising energy costs – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)

New homes to produce nearly a third less carbon – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)

Government to bring an end to unsafe cladding with multi-billion pound intervention – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)

Levelling Up the United Kingdom: Executive Summary (publishing.service.gov.uk)

Housing an ageing population: a reading list – House of Commons Library (parliament.uk)

People at the Heart of Care – adult social care reform white paper (publishing.service.gov.uk)

Older people’s housing at heart of levelling up as cross-government task force announced | ARCO (arcouk.org)

Wellbeing of Future Generations Bill [HL] – Parliamentary Bills – UK Parliament

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