Chancellor to unveil 拢1.4bn affordable housing fund as industry makes final pleas for public cash
Chancellor Philip Hammond will announce a new 拢1.4bn fund for affordable housing in this afternoon鈥檚 Autumn Statement.
Hammond will say the fund will help build 40,000 extra affordable homes over the next five years.
The funding will be split three ways, according to reports, with cash going to affordable rent, shared ownership and the trailed new 鈥榬ent to buy鈥 scheme, where tenants pay a discounted rent and build up equity in a property over 25 years.
The fund will be available for councils, housing associations and private firms to bid for.
Extra infrastructure cash - including 拢1.3bn of new funding to improve the country鈥檚 roads - is also expected to be announced.
黑洞社区鈥檚 contributing editor Joey Gardiner will be covering the Autumn Statement on building.co.uk live this afternoon, with a live blog covering all the announcements relevant to construction with rolling analysis and reaction. Hammond is due to address the Commons from 12.30pm.
Many observers think the government will focus on 鈥渟hovel-ready鈥 infrastructure projects that can be delivered within the current political cycle.
The Treasury recently said the chancellor and transport secretary Chris Grayling had 鈥渋dentified the importance of prioritising projects which make an immediate impact鈥.
In recent days construction industry leaders have made their final pleas to Hammond for a boost in infrastructure investment, faster decision-making, and more control for regional authorities in rail and road spending..
Industry leaders said the government needs to speed up decision making on infrastructure projects to boost the economy and also called for more City Deals and further control to be handed to regional authorities like Transport for the North (TfN).
If government gets started on infrastructure, housing will surely follow
Mark Naysmith, WSP Parsons Brinckerhoff
Mark Naysmith, UK managing director for WSP Parsons Brickerhoff, urged Hammond to renew focus on the 鈥渇our H鈥檚鈥 of major infrastructure projects - Heathrow, Hinkley, HS2 and Highways.
He said: 鈥淩ecent government announcements in these areas have been encouraging for the construction industry, and we need to build on this momentum to make sure we get spades in the ground as quickly as possible.
鈥淧ublic sector infrastructure investment not only boosts growth and productivity, it also helps the 5th H: housing 鈥 If government gets started on infrastructure, housing will surely follow.鈥
Meanwhile, the Civil Engineering Contractors Association called on the government to keep up the momentum on creating City Deals - the brainchild of former chancellor George Osborne - for devolved city regions.
Marie-Claude Hemming, the trade body鈥檚 head of external affairs, said: 鈥淐ity Deals have the potential to release economic activity quickly. Their implementation can be exactly the shot in the arm that will deliver local growth and high skill employment to regional economies.鈥
Richard Threlfall, head of infrastructure at KPMG, called on the government to 鈥渃ommit to giving Transport for the North and other proposed statutory regional authorities, direct control over road and rail investment priorities in their regions.鈥
He added: 鈥淭he prosperity of the construction industry over the next few years now depends almost entirely on government policy.鈥
Chris Pike, infrastructure development director at Arcadis, said: 鈥淭he government needs to send a clear message to the world that Britain is open for business by progressing vital infrastructure projects at the earliest opportunity.
鈥淐learly, there are a number of reasons for projects not going ahead on schedule but, all too often, stalling could potentially be avoided or, if the impacts were clearly understood, decisions may be taken differently.鈥
Liz Jenkins, partner at law firm Clyde & Co, said: 鈥淭he government needs to speed up decision making if it is serious about driving forward the UK鈥檚 infrastructure.鈥
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