Hard to say how many votes it will win him, but Gordon Brown’s £1.5bn contribution to the deserves a few cheers from the construction industry. The money is intended to deliver 20,000 affordable homes and build the infrastructure to stimulate another 10,000 private ones. The government has also initiated a new model for housebuilding: councils are to begin building again, and contractors will be given land in return for a share of the equity in the finished product. If these ideas work, they could create a whole new way of doing social housing.
As our points out, the total amount built will probably be 10,000 short of the 70,000 target that was to have been reached in 2010/11. But given that it was set in 2007, before the recession turned all those section 106 agreements into fish and chip paper, it’s thousands more than anyone expected.
A more realistic grumble is that the government has robbed Peter to pay Paul – a point dramatised by the news that, of the 180 further education colleges that applied for money, a mere 13 are to get just half what they asked for (page 15). So all those inspirational new builds look like turning into chewing gum and Polyfilla refurbs. This concern is heightened by Whitehall departments themselves: they have no idea where this £1.5bn is coming from, though there’s talk of the Decent Homes budget being slashed and money siphoned from the Treasury’s PFI rescue pot.
But we have to be pragmatic. The government knows its finances are about as bad as they could be in peacetime, and it still has to do what it can to stimulate the economy and impress the voters. So, aiming the money at affordable housing is a shrewd move. First, it will probably be spent: unlike most state agencies, the HCA (in its previous incarnation as the Housing Corporation) has a good record of putting its money to work. Second, it will be spent quickly: unlike schools and hospitals, housing sites with planning permission can be mobilised quickly. Third, it’s good PR, as all the cartoons of Brown the Builder this week illustrate. (And, as a bonus, the government now has a pretty good retort to those complaining about preferential treatment for bankers and car-makers.) Finally, there is a social pay-off for those in desperate need of housing. And that’s some good news, at least.
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